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Who

Who is a pronoun in the English language that refers to people. It functions as an interrogative pronoun in questions about identity and as a relative pronoun introducing clauses that describe a person.

Origin and history: Who derives from Old English hwā, from Proto-Germanic *hwa-, and is related to other

Forms and basic use: The primary forms are who (nominative), whom (objective), and whose (possessive). Who is

Interrogative and relative use: In questions, who appears at the beginning with subject-verb inversion, as in

Indefinite forms: Whoever and whomever are compound pronouns used to refer to an unspecified person, with whomever

Germanic
forms
such
as
German
wer
and
Dutch
wie.
The
pronoun
has
developed
a
distinct
nominative
form
who
and
a
traditional
accusative/dative
form
whom,
with
whose
as
the
possessive.
used
for
people
and,
in
modern
English,
is
common
in
both
subject
and
object
positions
in
everyday
speech.
Whom
remains
the
prescriptive
choice
for
the
object
of
a
verb
or
a
preposition
in
formal
writing,
though
many
speakers
use
who
in
those
positions.
Whose
marks
possession
and
can
refer
to
people,
animals,
or
things
in
various
contexts.
Who
is
there?
Who
did
you
meet?
In
relative
clauses,
who
introduces
a
clause
about
a
person:
The
author
who
won
the
prize.
In
strict
grammar,
the
object
position
would
take
whom:
The
person
whom
you
met.
After
a
preposition,
traditional
usage
favors
whom
(to
whom,
with
whom),
while
many
speakers
now
say
who.
serving
as
the
formal
object
form.