Whomever Vs Whoever

"To whomever it may concern," But if the writer had truly intended to use the free choice meaning of To anyone whom it may concern, then, in a free choice construction, more forms might be possible: "To whoever/whomever/who/whom it may concern," and the version originally used by the letter writer is one of those, "To whoever it may concern,"

Whomever Vs Whoever 1

We are debating the use of Whoever vs Whomever in this sentence "Thanks to whoever fixed this". What is the correct form? - Thanks to whoever fixed this - Thanks to whomever fixed this! Any expla...

Use of Whoever and Whomever [duplicate] - English Language & Usage ...

Whomever Vs Whoever 3

The answer is that it has to be whoever, because the relative pronoun takes the case of the function it serves in the subordinate clause. That whole clause is “whoever is writing it”, where whoever is the subject of the clause, just as is is its verb. Swap in he -vs- him on things like this to see which one works right: you would never say *him is writing it, so it cannot be whomever. No ...

Whomever Vs Whoever 4

In the following sentence, should I use WHOMEVER or WHOEVER? I don’t want whomever it is to see that I’m a woman alone. Or should it be: I don’t want whoever it is to see that I’m a woman alone...

Whomever Vs Whoever 5

To choose who and whom, whoever, and whomever, simply determine whether it serves as the subject or the object in the sentence. Use "who" where you would use "he" or "she." (notice: all end in vowels) Use "whom" where you would use "him" or "her." (all end in consonants) At the beginning of the question, use who for a subject. Use whom for an ...