I've seen several images like this--and versions of it--on Facebook (even posted a couple myself), and if you search Google (owl whom), you'll find quite a few popping up.
Who and whom used to drive me crazy when I was a young-un. My mother was an English teacher, and her method of correcting me was to repeat my sentence, emphasizing my error in its correct version ... with a question-mark rise at the end of the sentence. Annoying, I confess.
DANNY: Him and me biked down to the ice-cream store today.
MOM: HE and I biked down ...?
DANNY [THINKING, BUT NOT DARING TO UTTER ALOUD]: You did? Didn't see you there.
Later, my older brother began doing this as well, and thus I (unwillingly) learned lots of "correct" English usage without ever knowing why it was correct. So ... in school I got good grades on usage tests by looking at the choices and thinking: "How would Mom say it?"
Not much help when I began teaching English myself and had to learn why in order to explain the reason(s) to my students.
Anyway, who and whom ...
I know I wrote a post about this some years ago; I don't care; here we go again ...
I didn't understand the difference between the two words (and whoever and whomever) until I was past the age I should have known. I don't remember who taught me this little process long ago, but it works like a charm.
Here's the process:
- Isolate the word with its own clause, ignoring everything else around it (clause below is underlined).
- Give some pizza to (whoever/whomever) wants any.
- Substitute either he or him where the choice lies.
- So the choice becomes He wants any or him wants any.
- And remember this: he = who/whoever; him = whom/whomever.
- So your answer becomes: Give some pizza to whoever wants any.
- Let's try another one ...
- Who/Whom you love the most is the person to who/whom you should be invariably kind.
- He/Him you love the most is the person to he/him you should be most kind.
- Answer: Whom you love the most is the person to whom you should be most kind.
A lot of people, I know, practice what's called hypercorrection, employing, say, a form of a word which they think sounds more correct--but actually isn't.
- Give the tickets to him and I. (No: to him and me.)
Okay, here's a little quiz (answers below):
- Who/Whom guesses the lottery number correctly is very fortunate indeed.
- To whoever/whomever stole my bike I wish only the worst.
- I'll save my rage for whoever/whomever beats me in the race.
- Save the biggest portion for the person who/whom you like best.
- I don't know who/whom you voted for, but at least you voted.
- Who
- whoever
- whoever
- whom
- who
But I'm not sure that owl did--not until I know what he was trying to say!
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