It can get incredibly complicated so I don’t understand all the nuances myself, but I’ll explain it as best I can: Prepositions are words that denote where things are in space and/or over time. Things like “of” or “from” are common prepositions.
Prepositions are often followed by an Object. So if I said, “A letter arrived from Jeff,” Jeff would be the Object of the Preposition “from.”
If you want to ask the Identity of the person who sent the letter, the formal, “proper” English sentence would be: “From whom did we receive the letter?”
You could also ask “Who’d we get the letter from?” BUT, old-fashion English grammar rules say that you are not supposed to end a sentence with a preposition. In modern times however, such rules aren’t really observed. It seems our bartender is a old fashioned sort.
Ah. Okay. So what threw me off was my assumption that the owl was responding to “you’re on” with “whooo” (who’s on?). So I thought the bartender was saying it should be “whom’s on”.
BUT, old-fashion English grammar rules say that you are not supposed to end a sentence with a preposition. In modern times however, such rules aren’t really observed
Fun anecdote time:
When I was in 7th and 8th grade (2008-2010) we had TWO separate hour-long English classes because our school hated us. One was your standard English class (big book, stories and reading comp, etc) and the other was called some stupid shit like “English comprehension” which is just what the fucking other class is guys c’mon. That one was taught from the smaller book (Americans will understand) and was mostly about grammar and proprr writing.
Well, in my 8th grade year our English teacher was a stuck-up 30ish lady who demanded we adhere to the old fashioned, proper rules. I vividly remember her mentioning she came from the same town as the lady who knew Twighlight and knew her growing up a little or something and that gave her authority??
Meanwhile our English comp teacher (mind you this is the class FOR that above mentioned stuff) is taught next door by a sweet old (mid 60s) Texan lady with a thick as fuck southern accent. Her stance on the matter was "if it ain’t written so bad ya can’t understand it then it ain’t written bad 'tal!” (she played up her accent when saying this). She’d teach you the correct way, but so long as your meanig was clear and style matched modern writing shed pass you.
Those 2 teachers regulsrly got into arguments on this subject. Conflicting English grades for many students all year. Much madness and confusion all around.
Texas Lady was my across-street neighbor (literally moved in the year she started teaching my class) and so I got to hear all about it from a direct source and apparently her lazzais-faire attitude enraged the main english teacher but the principal could not give the slightest of fucks
One more quick one: that English comp class is where I got a scar on my hand cuz a girl stabbed me in my palm with a pen. Some kid licked the bandage i had put on.
Cute, but explain.
Not a native speaker, but I think you ask for the subject with ‘who’ (“Who did this?”) and ask for the object with ‘whom’ (“To whom was it done?”).
Anyways, owl set blud up man
It can get incredibly complicated so I don’t understand all the nuances myself, but I’ll explain it as best I can: Prepositions are words that denote where things are in space and/or over time. Things like “of” or “from” are common prepositions.
Prepositions are often followed by an Object. So if I said, “A letter arrived from Jeff,” Jeff would be the Object of the Preposition “from.”
If you want to ask the Identity of the person who sent the letter, the formal, “proper” English sentence would be: “From whom did we receive the letter?”
You could also ask “Who’d we get the letter from?” BUT, old-fashion English grammar rules say that you are not supposed to end a sentence with a preposition. In modern times however, such rules aren’t really observed. It seems our bartender is a old fashioned sort.
Imma gonna start correcting people with “It’s whom’d we get the letter from?” Feathers ruffled, hackles raised.
Ah. Okay. So what threw me off was my assumption that the owl was responding to “you’re on” with “whooo” (who’s on?). So I thought the bartender was saying it should be “whom’s on”.
Thank you for the clarification!
Fun anecdote time:
When I was in 7th and 8th grade (2008-2010) we had TWO separate hour-long English classes because our school hated us. One was your standard English class (big book, stories and reading comp, etc) and the other was called some stupid shit like “English comprehension” which is just what the fucking other class is guys c’mon. That one was taught from the smaller book (Americans will understand) and was mostly about grammar and proprr writing.
Well, in my 8th grade year our English teacher was a stuck-up 30ish lady who demanded we adhere to the old fashioned, proper rules. I vividly remember her mentioning she came from the same town as the lady who knew Twighlight and knew her growing up a little or something and that gave her authority??
Meanwhile our English comp teacher (mind you this is the class FOR that above mentioned stuff) is taught next door by a sweet old (mid 60s) Texan lady with a thick as fuck southern accent. Her stance on the matter was "if it ain’t written so bad ya can’t understand it then it ain’t written bad 'tal!” (she played up her accent when saying this). She’d teach you the correct way, but so long as your meanig was clear and style matched modern writing shed pass you.
Those 2 teachers regulsrly got into arguments on this subject. Conflicting English grades for many students all year. Much madness and confusion all around.
Texas Lady was my across-street neighbor (literally moved in the year she started teaching my class) and so I got to hear all about it from a direct source and apparently her lazzais-faire attitude enraged the main english teacher but the principal could not give the slightest of fucks
One more quick one: that English comp class is where I got a scar on my hand cuz a girl stabbed me in my palm with a pen. Some kid licked the bandage i had put on.