Who or whom sentence?

I haven’t tried to change who I am.

Or:

I haven’t tried to change whom I am.

✅ Answers

? Favorite Answer

  • its i tried to WHO i am.. why? its because you’re talking about someone.. whom is an objective pronoun which you use if you’re asking to whom are you giving this object..

  • That sentence requires “who”.

    To whom are you directing your inquiry?

    With whom should I communicate my request?

    The Lord will choose whom He will.

    In many cases, the use of who or whom depends upon formality. In modern usage, who can be substituted for whom in most situations even though there are times when whom is clearly the more correct choice. Who is clearly an interrogatory word whereas whom can be a pronoun as well.

    Source(s): my English opinion

  • We all agree it’s ‘who’.

    The reason why, is that the verb ‘to be’ (I am, He is, We are) takes the nominative case both in the subject and in the object of a sentence.

    We don’t recognize this in sentences where the object is a noun e.g.

    I am a teacher

    My name is Tom

    He is Tom Cruise

    In the musical, Man of La Mancha, one song goes:

    I am I, Don Quixote

    The Lord of La Mancha

    My destiny calls and I go.

  • who

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