Yesterday's post was updated with a photo of Jass in her cat house.
Young people will not hesitate over whether to use who or whom, and in my opinion it is good thing that they probably just use who.
I didn't get a great lotta learnin' about grammar, but I've kinda picked it up along the way. Don't end a sentence with it, which I frequently do. Probably don't end a sentence with 'do' either, which I just did. Don't end a sentence with did...etc.
At times a suspicion comes to me that the word I am typing should be whom and not who. EG; Who did you go with, or, with whom did you go. If spoken, the latter sounds pompous because of the rephrasing. Who did you go with, is a perfectly clear question.
Understanding the rules of object and subject about who and whom are beyond me. I've read them but I can't absorb them.
I believe among my senior readers are some excellent grammarians, so can any of you simplify when who or whom should be used?
Or, should I just see whom as legalese and forget about ever using whom?
Speaking of words, I heard or read in media somewhere whereby someone referred to a forty oneth birthday. I must have heard the word, because if I read it, I would know how to spell oneth, and I don't.
This doesn't feel quite finished but I wrote it some time ago, and I don't want a backlog of unfinished posts.






.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)