Who or whom I worked with?
Who or Whom I Worked With? The ideal answer is with whom I worked. Whom goes with the object of the verb or preposition in a sentence. Since this phrase contains the preposition with, the most correct way to craft this sentence is using whom.
Who did you work with or whom did you work with?
Yes. Although it’s odd to use a formal “whom” and also put the preposition at the end of the clause. If you’re speaking formally enough to say “whom,” you would normally say “with whom you work.”
Who she worked with or whom she worked with?
‘Person with whom I work’ is formal; you can say this in speech, but it’s rare. The normal way of saying it is ‘person I work with’, or ‘person that I work with’, or ‘person who I work with’. If the preposition is in its normal place at the end, you’d use ‘who’ rather than formal ‘whom’.
Who should I work with or whom should I work with?
Whom should be 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.
How can I use work in a sentence?
Work sentence example
- It did work this morning.
- Every day there is much work to be done.
- After Alex goes to work and Jonathan goes to school, Destiny and I do the chores.
- It will be so much fun to work on it with Jonathan and Destiny.
- I like to work accurately.
- How do these features work so well?
Who whom practice sentences?
Who/Whom Exercise
- Choose whoever/whomever you want.
- Show the door to whoever/whomever disagrees.
- Who/whom did you see?
- A man who/whom I recognized left the theater.
- He is the one who/whom we think will give up first.
- We don’t know who/whom you are talking about.
- I never met anyone who/whom looked so tired as she/her.