Very good, as usual. I've been learning English by myself for a couple of years and this channel has been one of the best (if not the best) I have found in my route. Cheers!
This video is great. The difference betwen who and whom was explained clearly. This is somewhat confusing but you were able to explain it perfectly. Thank you very much. I'm excited to watch your other videos. God bless.
Dear Prof, marvellous lesson, Honestly, I agre with you up to a point. Let me explain presently! In modern English when I obtained my Advenced Certificate in English I had to answer "whom" and "who" in the right position. Thank you kindly, you are the be-all and end-all. A
Dear Teacher Andrew, The lesson of " who /whom " is very insightful and helpful. The explanations are very clear and concise, as always. The diagrams as well as the arrows make our understanding much easier. To be honest, I got through many grammar books, but did not have much information in relation to your explanations. Thank you so much in making such a video lesson. Sorry, can I trouble you for making a video lesson about the Relative Adverb : when (= in/on which), where (=in/at which), why (= for which), and how (= in what way). I have confident in your ability. Once again, thank you for your unwavering support in continuing provide us with good video lesson. It means a lot. Best Wishes, Fazil
Thank you Teacher. Here some examples that I have learned today then the Teacher will see If I am correct or not. The people who I work with is very cheerful. Who do you work with? Who will you play with ? Who do you live with? Thank you Teacher, for very good explanation about prepositions.
Hello, thanks for your message. All of your sentences are correct. There is a small mistake in the first sentence. Here is the correction: "The people who I work with *are* very cheerful." ("people" is a plural so the verb must also be plural.) Andrew
Hi there Andrew How are you? As usualy your lesson was very clear and interresting I' m looking forward to seeing your next video. Thanks so much Andrew.
Hi Andrew, I have a question. In international tests like TESOL or IELTS. Is common for them to use whom and how in the same question to choose one of them? Because "whom" is not common in spoken English.
Hello! I have a question of how we use relative clauses with causative verb sentences. Eg. The woman from whom Mark gets his hair cut is over there. Or The woman whom Mark gets her to cut his hair is over there. How can we put relative clause with causative sentences?
thank you (interesting lesson)! please video passive and active voice Andrew who help person to improve the english langage ( true or false ???) thank you
Hi sir. I really know the difference between who and whom, but i don't know what to you use if i have an English exam. The problem is that every teacher has his own perspective because Some teachers say that never use who as an object and if you use it as an object it will consider wrong . What should i do?
Hi, I want to know the name of that person who gave you a pen, so how should i ask the question? "Whom did you give the pen?" or "to whom did you give the pen?" Which sentence is correct Please answer.
Very good, as usual. I've been learning English by myself for a couple of years and this channel has been one of the best (if not the best) I have found in my route. Cheers!
This video is great. The difference betwen who and whom was explained clearly. This is somewhat confusing but you were able to explain it perfectly. Thank you very much. I'm excited to watch your other videos. God bless.
Andrew, you're an excellent teacher on RUclips
Great lesson Andrew 👍
May God always keep you happy,sir!
அருமையாக இருந்தது உங்கள் பதிவு ,🥰
Dear Prof, marvellous lesson,
Honestly, I agre with you up to a point. Let me explain presently!
In modern English when I obtained my Advenced Certificate in English I had to answer "whom" and "who" in the right position.
Thank you kindly, you are the be-all and end-all. A
Andrew, who is an English teacher from Crown Academy of English, has left a message to us in order to don’t forget his next video.
I appreciate you.
I think instead of "in order to don’t forget'" you should write - in order not to forget :)
The lesson was interesting. Thank you Andrew.
Thanks Mr Andrew so much 👍👍👍today what you did I understood it for first time I differ between these verb thanks ❤❤❤❤👍👍👍👍👍
Dear Teacher Andrew,
The lesson of " who /whom " is very insightful and helpful. The explanations are very clear and concise, as always. The diagrams as well as the arrows make our understanding much easier.
To be honest, I got through many grammar books, but did not have much information in relation to your explanations. Thank you so much in making such a video lesson.
Sorry, can I trouble you for making a video lesson about the Relative Adverb : when (= in/on which), where (=in/at which), why (= for which), and how (= in what way). I have confident in your ability.
Once again, thank you for your unwavering support in continuing provide us with good video lesson. It means a lot.
Best Wishes,
Fazil
Thank you Teacher. Here some examples that I have learned today then the Teacher will see If I am correct or not. The people who I work with is very cheerful. Who do you work with? Who will you play with ? Who do you live with? Thank you Teacher, for very good explanation about prepositions.
Hello, thanks for your message.
All of your sentences are correct. There is a small mistake in the first sentence. Here is the correction:
"The people who I work with *are* very cheerful." ("people" is a plural so the verb must also be plural.)
Andrew
Hi there Andrew How are you? As usualy your lesson was very clear and interresting I' m looking forward to seeing your next video. Thanks so much Andrew.
Thank you for the lesson, you are the best teacher.
This only i know about "whom" (To whom it may concern) 😅. Thank you so much teacher Andrew I learned now better about who and whom ❤
Super teaching...thanq
Hi Andrew, I have a question. In international tests like TESOL or IELTS. Is common for them to use whom and how in the same question to choose one of them? Because "whom" is not common in spoken English.
Thank you so much 👌👌💖💖💖
Hello! I have a question of how we use relative clauses with causative verb sentences. Eg. The woman from whom Mark gets his hair cut is over there. Or The woman whom Mark gets her to cut his hair is over there. How can we put relative clause with causative sentences?
I was a bit confused about the word "whom" over "who". Thanks for such a clear explanation.
thank you (interesting lesson)!
please video passive and active voice
Andrew who help person to improve the english langage ( true or false ???) thank you
Great! I understand with your useful explanations 👍
😀😀😀😄😄 Thank you very much !!! It was very helpful lesson 😃😃😃
Thank you very much
Very useful lession.
Thanks.
Lessons are important
Very very good exercise thank you sir.
Can I assume that these rules work for American English as well?
Yes, that's correct. :)
An amazing video!
Plz bring one episode of clauses..!
Thanks, professor
I loved it!
Mr. Andrew, can I use contractions in formal speaking or it's bad?
Don't worry, contractions are ok.
Tonight I cleared my doubt
Sir,the word "sun"is a proper noun.why cannot we write this word in capital letter.please explain why and why not?p Siva Rao,India.
Hi sir. I really know the difference between who and whom, but i don't know what to you use if i have an English exam. The problem is that every teacher has his own perspective because Some teachers say that never use who as an object and if you use it as an object it will consider wrong .
What should i do?
I would use whom so they never can tell that it is wrong
@@ndres839 thanks so much
I have watched a video , one of the native speakers said : one of whom live in Taiwan . Is it wrong ?
Can I say?
The customer whom I called was angry.
Thanks
What about the customer that called me was angry ?
Hi,
I want to know the name of that person who gave you a pen, so how should i ask the question?
"Whom did you give the pen?" or "to whom did you give the pen?" Which sentence is correct Please answer.
Thanks sir
hi
During taking an exam which one could be the best option. who or whom
Whom? It is more formal, isn't it?
Another nice video💖
Ex- Maths be made to understand by solving.
Is this a correct sentence
you have the same profile pic as mine.
Nice explanation
Plz make a video on impersonal pronoun
Unfortunatly whom is considered old grammar,I find it the formal expression for the objectif ,perhaps because I like grammar and linguistic too much
Either and neither? Pls...
Ty sir
👍
We don't say whom anymore, but we say who instead in Modern English because whom is so old.
Thank you Mr.Andrew .In fact,your videos are the best .
Can you see my comment below the video (How come?)
مرحبا
Why do not put whose in the same video to know the difference between them ??
Anyways thanks a bunch
We can't say: The woman "whom" cuts Mark's hair.............?
The woman is the *subject* of the verb "cut". Therefore, we use *who.*
*whom* is not correct. *whom* is used as an object.
Andrew
@@CrownAcademyEnglish Thank you so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so so much!
*WHOMST*
kicktcha/kickcha= kicked ya (kicked you)