The Confusion — and Why It Matters
Few grammar questions trip people up as consistently as who vs. whom. Many writers guess, rely on instinct, or simply avoid "whom" altogether to dodge the embarrassment of getting it wrong. But once you understand the underlying logic, the choice becomes reliable and almost automatic.
The Core Rule
The distinction comes down to grammatical function:
- Use who when it is the subject of a verb — the one doing the action.
- Use whom when it is the object — the one receiving the action or following a preposition.
The He/Him Substitution Test
The fastest way to decide which form to use is the he/him trick. Rearrange the sentence (or the clause in question) and substitute either "he" or "him":
- If he sounds right → use who
- If him sounds right → use whom
Both "he" and "who" are subjects. Both "him" and "whom" are objects. And crucially, both "him" and "whom" end in m — a useful memory hook.
Examples in Practice
| Sentence | Substitution Test | Correct Choice |
|---|---|---|
| ___ called me last night? | He called me → subject | Who called me last night? |
| To ___ should I address the letter? | Address it to him → object | To whom should I address the letter? |
| She is the person ___ I trust most. | I trust him most → object | She is the person whom I trust most. |
| ___ do you think will win? | He will win → subject | Who do you think will win? |
The Tricky Case: "Who Do You Think Will Win?"
This example deserves attention because it looks like an object case but isn't. The key is identifying the verb that "who/whom" belongs to. In "Who do you think will win?" — the relevant clause is "will win." The subject of "will win" is "who," making the subject form correct.
Don't be misled by the phrase "do you think" in the middle — it's a parenthetical clause that doesn't affect the grammar of "who."
After Prepositions: Almost Always "Whom"
When "who/whom" directly follows a preposition — to, for, with, by, from, about — it is nearly always whom:
- For whom the bell tolls
- With whom did you travel?
- From whom did you hear this?
Is "Whom" Dying Out?
In casual spoken English, "whom" is increasingly rare, and few native speakers will judge you harshly for saying "who" in informal contexts. However, in formal writing — journalism, business communication, academic work — using "whom" correctly still signals careful command of the language.
The rule isn't going away entirely. It's simply becoming more context-dependent. When in doubt: in writing, apply the rule; in conversation, follow the register of those around you.
Quick Reference
- Subject position (doing) → who
- Object position (receiving) → whom
- After a preposition → whom
- Ends in M? Think: him → whom