It is not clear ... he is going to leave his house to in his will. what/whose/whom/that/which
I think this sentence is wrong.
yes, it think @Blaze is right.. the sentence seems wrong.
"To" should not be there.
whom
whom is the right answer. But i clearly understand why it is ?
by the way, does it have to be like that ? ..... his house in his will.
I am sorry i do not know the exact answer, i read a lot..and when i read that sentence thats what made most sense!
Because he is leaving it to a person, we can assume that much, so we know we are dealing with some form of a "who." That narrows it down to whose and whom. Whose is a possessive, typically used in a question (Whose coat is that?), whereas whom is used as an acted upon pronoun (To whom does the coat belong to?). You know that you use "who" when you are referring to the subject of a clause and "whom" when you are referring to the object of a clause, so the answer is "whom."
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