Just a question :P...

<p>Can you guys tell me the rule with "who" and "whom"? I know it's the thing with subjective vs objective, but this looks weird to me...</p>

<p>"The teacher gave the students (who) aced the test high-fives."</p>

<p>Because the teacher is the subject, wouldn't "who" be "whom"? Can you guys explain this to me :O? Thanks!</p>

<p>Can someone also look at this question:</p>

<p>Although (best) (known for) her voice-over (work in) Japanese cartoons, actress Kyotoko Kishida also starred in the bleak 1964 film Woman in the Dunes. (No error)</p>

<p>I thought it was A… Shouldn’t “best” be “better” because we’re comparing two things here (her voice-over work in Japanese cartoons and starring in the movie)?</p>

<p>The answer is No error, by the way.</p>

<p>Who is the subject form, and whom is the direct object form. Thus, the action happens to whom and who does the action. Also, best is correct as is better.</p>

<p>I don’t think the SAT tests who versus whom.</p>