Today, we shall honor the girls whom desire to be cats.
That is myfetish
>>723591132
>can of sprite on the shelf
???
>>723590901
>whom desire
mfw people try to use "whom" to sound smart, but don't know how to use "whom"
whom'st'dv'nt do that'd'nt thou
>>723590901
more of her please
>>723591592
Hypercorrection is a property of human language. Get used to it.
>>723591592
>>723590901
should be "...THAT desire to be..."
>>723592208
sophie kitten, lots of her on mumless
At least some literate fags got in here quickly. You're doing god's work!
>>723592111
This is correct, trips confirm.
>>723592428
thank you!
>>723592362
Should be "WHO desire", not "that". Because they're people - not physical objects.
When a girl goes to the store you don't say "What went to the store?" You say "Who went to the store?"
>>723591592
thou art whence a faggot-ass internet faggot.
Thine kitten beith beneatheth thou'st table.
>>723591592
tfw random autist needs to belittle people to feel smart because he's too buttfuck retarded to realise OP used it correctly.
>>723592760
Not the original autist, but an autist none-the-less, and OP used it incorrectly.
In general:
Who is nominative form
Whom is objective form
You use "who" if the person doing the action is in question
You use "whom" if the person on the receiving end of the action is in question
>"You (subject) slapped whom (direct object)?"
>"For WHOM (indirect object) did YOU (subject) make the pie?"
>"Who (subject) answered the phone?"
OP had a special case, though. He was using it as an adjective clause. Adjective clauses use subject pronouns -- which, that, and who
>"The office, which had two lunchrooms"
>"The red ball that we bought at the store"
>"The lady who works at the front desk"
We are honoring "the girls who desire to be cats"
tfw gf is catgirl
>>723591592
tfw you get reprimanded by someone whomst'd'ven't even an understanding of the English language
>>723592760
It wasn't used correctly. "Whom" should be the object of a sentence, while OP used it as the subject.
>>723593749
My girlfriend used to get dressed up in cat ears and tail for my regularly. Hasn't done it in a couple years. Sad times.
>>723593915
OP technically used it as an adjective clause, but those should still use subject pronouns because they can be split apart into their own sentences: "They desire to be cats", "Who desire to be cats?"
>>723594191
True. But since adjective clauses use the subjective pronouns, you can understand my error.