<p>i put travel underground b/c that specific paragraph was talking a/b the advent of the subway and b/c it is good rhetoric to use lol</p>
<p>what was the first question that had who/whom?</p>
<p>Yay, so far no mistakes on English! I was very sure of all of my answers and had time to check twice so I’m crossing my fingers for this section to make up for my lower math/reading ones…</p>
<p>^ I put one “whom” and one “who.” I’m like 80% sure that the “who” was right because it was definitely used as a subject in a question where “whom” was also an answer. For my “whom” answer I’m pretty sure the context was something like “, … one of whom…” but I could be totally off or thinking of a practice test.</p>
<p>I put “whom” as the first one and “who” as the second. I know whom was right because it came after a preposition (possibly “of” or “for”), hence it required the objective case I realllly do not remember the second one. If I recall correctly, I believe I put “who” because it was a subject of the sentence, not an object of a preposition. <Not as sure about that. lol</p>
<p>The second one was, “My parents, ___ still kept in contact with her dad…” I think it was “who”</p>
<p>I know the general consensus is that
pharmaceuticals, medicine, and chemicals was acceptable but anyone else think it was not right?? It seems kind of like extraneous info</p>
<p>So no one remembers the first one (which used WHOM)?</p>
<p>I also put that pharmaceuticals, medicine, and chemicals was extraneous.</p>
<p>Yeah, I don’t think that was needed. </p>
<p>For the Whom/Who questions, I don’t remember what the questions were, but I know I used Who on the first one and Whom on the second.</p>
<p>I only remember one who/whom question… but the one I remember I know that I changed whom to who… hopefully I picked correctly!</p>
<p>@Night</p>
<p>other ppl earlier just said the opposite (1st was whom, 2nd was who)</p>
<p>It was one that was like: She found out from her parents, whom had been in contact with… etc. </p>
<p>and I changed it to “who had been…” I’m not always so great with the who/whom though. I remember 9th grade English and how it related to direct and indirect objects or something. But I usually just play it by ear and hope for the best, ha. It’s worked relatively well in the past. Considering I don’t know what direct and indirect objects are, I’m happy with a 34.</p>
<p>What was the other “who/whom” question… and I put “purrs softly” for the wheelchair question too, was that correct?</p>
<p>Yeah, they’re probably right. I wasn’t exactly sure. I should have just picked one for both so I’d be certain to get one right.</p>
<p>^lol
I usually take the risk and get all or nothing :)</p>
<p>Oh now I remember the other one. I said whom and I’m 90% sure that was correct… maybe, ha. It was like many people were skeptical or upset or something about the subway being built, and then you use of whom or whom or whatever it was because it was multiple people maybe? I think that was my logic. I’m not sure… but I know I used whom for the subway and who for the Alaska</p>
<p>@Ano</p>
<p>Alaska one?
Do u mean the one like “Though my parents blah blah, who still kept contact…?”</p>
<p>the one that had whom as an answer i think was the brightly lit stations…blah blah people blah blah.</p>
<p>@adj</p>
<p>What passage was “brightly lit stations” in?</p>
<p>The brightly lit stations was the passage about the subways.</p>