That’s really interesting actually. Wonder if that’s a common trait of ds? Well. Know what I’m googling later lol.
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Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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WHO I played with.
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This is where you use whom; although who has largely replaced it in modern English, whom is analogous to me, him, her, us, them (as opposed to I, he, she, we, they). It depends whether the lady is the subject or the object, and in Helen's sentence she is the object.
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It would be whom if she said, “with whom I played”.
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Hmm I see that's correct. And so it would be "who I played with", yes that makes sense. Vicki, apologies, I think you were right after all!
End of conversation
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