Hello Teacher, I have a question for you related to the object pronoun whom. In this sentence which should be used whom(object) or who (subject). Someone who /whom I love reading is Shakespeare. Shakespeare is subject, so that is the gist. I would be more than glad if you could clarify it please
Good question. I haven't created anything about who vs. whom yet. You don't really need either in that sentence. Honestly, most native speakers would just use WHO, and it would be fine. I personally only use WHOM after a preposition... and WHO all the other times.
I have some English PDF resources here: www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Woodward-Education/Category/English-85570 (I don't have one about Object Pronouns yet)
Thank you for clear explanation with simple sentences. I really appreciate if you always use American accent because otherwise (ie: British accent) I cannot share this with my students. They are having difficulty understanding British accent.
Hi, I don't have a British accent! I personally think it is important for your students to become accustomed to ALL types of accents, including those by non-native speakers because that is the reality of the world. You could be seriously limiting your students by TRYING to only teach ONE type. ALSO ... there are MANY types of accents in America (and the UK) so there isn't ONE accent from those places. I can introduce to people from both places (including America) where even other native teachers have difficulty understanding them. By the way, I don't have an American accent NOR a British accent. I have a more "neutral" accent with a hint of a New Zealand accent. Most of my lessons have subtitles / closed captions so that also helps students.
Hola buenos que el día viernes en la que me ha llegado la hora que 😅el día viernes en 😮😂😮😂😢😂horario nocturno de la empresa 😮😂i? u otros elementos 😂😮que el día viernes en la 😂😮😂tarde de y para que me e😮 yang lain Bu 😮mohon bantuannya 😅ya pak 😂😮terimakasih atas 😊