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  1. Jun 16, 2020 · "Them," combined with the "who," has to be used with a preposition like "to," "from," or "with." "I pity them," by itself, is a grammatically correct sentence, but when you connect the dependent clause with "who," it is no longer correct.

  2. Mar 23, 2011 · Actually, the sentence has the form of an "it-cleft". The parsing is: [It is they/them] + [who lied]. The main clause is "It is they/them". The cleft relative clause is "who lied". There is no copula clause involved, for the main clause uses a dummy pronoun "It" as subject.

  3. The relative clause who lost money is a postdependent (=postmodifier), and as such it cannot modify them (because them as a definite personal pronoun cannot be modified). The plural demonstrative pronouns ( these and those ) behave differently.

  4. We use them to ask questions and to introduce relative clauses. Who as a question word. We use who as an interrogative pronoun to begin questions about people: Who’s next? Who makes the decisions here? Who did you talk to? We use who in indirect questions and statements: The phone rang. She asked me who it was. Can you tell me who I should talk to.

  5. Sep 18, 2023 · When to Use “Who” vs. “Whom”. Whom is used to refer to the object of a verb or preposition. When in doubt, try this simple trick: If you can replace the word with he or she, use who. If you can replace it with him or her, use whom. Who should be used to refer to the subject of a sentence.

  6. Aug 6, 2010 · You'd say "many of them", not "many of they", and similarly you'd say "many of us", not "many of we". Similarly, "many of whom", not "many of who", is the traditionally correct answer. (But as always, when in doubt use "who".)

  7. Who and whom are easy to confuse, but they are no different to he and him or they or them. 'Who' is the subject of a verb (like 'he'). 'Whom' is an object (like 'him'). Whom is never the subject of a verb.