who

See also: WHO, W.H.O., and W. H. O.

who - English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) enPR: ho͞o, IPA: /huː/
  • (General American) IPA: /hu/

Pronoun

who (singular or plural, nominative case, objective whom, who, possessive whose)

  1. (interrogative) What person or people; which person or people; asks for the identity of someone; used in a direct or indirect question.
    • Who is that? (direct question)
    • I don't know who it is. (indirect question)
  2. (relative) Introduces a relative clause having a human antecedent.
    1. With antecedent as subject.
      • That's the man who works at the newsagent. (defining)
      • My sister, who works in the accounts department, just got promoted to manager. (non-defining)
    2. (non-formal) With antecedent as object: whom.
      • That's the man who I saw earlier.
        (defining)
      • My brother, who you met the other day, is coming to stay for the weekend.
        (non-defining)
  3. (fused relative, archaic or marginal) Whoever, he who, they who.
    • Who insults my mother insults me.
    • Give it to who deserves it.
      (marginal usage)

Usage notes

  • Who is a subject pronoun. Whom is an object pronoun. To determine whether a particular sentence uses a subject or an object pronoun, rephrase it to use he/she/they or him/her/them instead of who, whom; if you use he, she or they, then you use the subject pronoun who; if you use him, her or them, then you use the object pronoun. The same rule applies to whoever/whosoever/whoso and whomever/whomsoever/whomso.
  • Who can also be used as an object pronoun, especially in informal writing and speech (hence one hears not only whom are you waiting for? but also who are you waiting for?), and whom may be seen as (overly) formal; in some dialects and contexts, it is hardly used, even in the most formal settings. As an exception to this, fronted prepositional phrases almost always use whom, e.g. one usually says with whom did you go?, not *with who did you go?. However, dialects in which whom is rarely used usually avoid fronting prepositional phrases in the first place (for example, using who did you go with?).
  • The use of who as an object pronoun is proscribed by many authorities, but is frequent nonetheless. It is usually felt to be much more acceptable than the converse hypercorrection in which whom is misused in place of who, as in *the savage whom spoke to me.
  • For more information, see "who" and "whom" on Wikipedia.
  • When “who” (or the other relative pronouns “that” and “which”) is used as the subject of a relative clause, the verb typically agrees with the antecedent of the pronoun. Thus “I who am...”, “He who is...”, “You who are...”, etc.
  • Formerly sometimes with partitive of, where which is ordinarily used

Translations

Noun

who (plural whos)

  1. A person under discussion; a question of which person.

Determiner

who

  1. (interrogative, dialect, African-American Vernacular) whose
    • Who phone just rang?

Derived terms

Anagrams

who - Middle English

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

  • IPA: /ʍɔː/, /ʍoː/
  • (northern or early) IPA: /ʍɑː/

Pronoun

who (singular or plural, nominative case, accusative/dative whom, genitive whos, inanimate what)

  1. (interrogative) who (nominative)
  2. (relative) who (nominative)
  3. (relative) whoever, anyone who (usually nominative)
  4. (indefinite) anyone, someone (nominative)

Usage notes

  • The non-relative indefinite sense is rare outside of the expression as who (as one).
  • In Middle English, use of who as an accusative is rare and restricted to the sense of "whoever".

Descendants

Meaning and Definition of who
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