to whom

listen to the pronunciation of to whom
English - Turkish
kime

Müfettiş kimin neyi kime, nerede, ne zaman ve niçin yaptığını bilmek istiyor. - The investigator wants to know who did what to whom where, when, and why.

İlk kek parçasını kime vereceksin? - To whom will you give the first piece of cake?

kimi

Ruhun kimin üzerine inip durduğunu görürsen, Kutsal Ruh'la vaftiz eden odur. - The man on whom you see the Spirit come down and remain is he who will baptize with the Holy Spirit.

Kiminle konuşuyordun? - With whom were you speaking?

kimi; kime; kimden; kimde: Whom do you mean? Kimi kastediyorsun? To whom did you give it? Onu kime verdiniz? From whom did you take
{z} 1. kimi; kime; kimden; kimde: Whom do you mean? Kimi kastediyorsun? To whom did you give it? Onu kime verdiniz? From whom did you take
kime

Hayatında en çok kime saygı duyuyorsun? - Whom do you respect most in your life?

Bana bu kitapların kime ait olduğunu söyle. - Tell me whom these books belong to!

-diği
ki o/onu/ona
-dığı
kim

Seçimde kime oy verdin? - Whom did you vote for in the election?

İş için kimi seçeceğine karar vermek sana kalmış. - It rests with you to decide whom to choose for the job.

kimden

Kimden bahsediyorsun? - Whom are you speaking of?

kimde

Kimden bahsediyorsun? - Whom are you speaking of?

ki onu

Dün Yamada'ya rastladım, ki onu yıllardır görmemiştim. - Yesterday I ran into Yamada, whom I hadn't seen in years.

kim en
English - English
Him; her; them (used as a relative pronoun to refer to a previously mentioned person or people.)

We have ten employees, of whom half are carpenters.

What person or people; which person or people, as the object of a verb

Whom did you ask?.

What person or people; which person or people, as the object of a preposition

With whom were you talking?.

{p} objective case of who
Whom is used in formal or written English instead of `who' when it is the object of a verb or preposition
You use whom after certain words, especially verbs and adjectives, to introduce a clause where you talk about the name or identity of a person or a group of people. He asked whom I'd told about his having been away = who
You use whom in questions when you ask about the name or identity of a person or group of people. `I want to send a telegram.' --- `Fine, to whom?' Whom did he expect to answer his phone? = who
The objective case of who
You use whom at the beginning of a relative clause when specifying the person or group of people you are talking about or when giving more information about them. One writer in whom I had taken an interest was Immanuel Velikovsky. the object form of 'who', used especially in formal speech or writing
pron. who (object form - used after prepositions and as direct object); which; that
to whom

    Turkish pronunciation

    tı hum

    Pronunciation

    /tə ˈho͞om/ /tə ˈhuːm/

    Etymology

    [ t&, tu, 'tü ] (preposition.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English tO; akin to Old High German zuo to, Latin donec as long as, until.

    Common Collocations

    to whom interest

    Videos

    ... get into Harvard, one of whom goes ...
    ... Reid Hoffman, without whom none of this would have been ...
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