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BNC: 45 COCA: 38

who

who /ˈhuː/ pronoun
who
/ˈhuː/
pronoun
Learner's definition of WHO
: what or which person or people谁;什么人used when you do not know the name or identity of a person or group of people that you are talking about or asking about用于不确定所谈论或询问对象的名字或身份时
used to question a person's character or authority用于质疑某人的身份或权威
used in questions that are meant to say that no one would or would not do something, know something, etc.谁会…,谁不…,谁知道(用于疑问句)
Usage see: whom
Usage see: whom
used after a noun or pronoun to show which group of people you are talking about用在名词或代词后,指代谈论到的某一类人
used to introduce an additional statement about someone who has already been mentioned用于引出对于所提及对象的补充说明

who's who

or who is who : information about the people who make up a group谁是谁(某一群体的人员信息)
: a list of the names of the important and well-known people in a particular field名人录
: the important and well-known people in a particular field名人;要人
BNC: 45 COCA: 38

who

1 of 2

pronoun

ˈhü How to pronounce who (audio)
ü
1
: what or which person or persons
used as an interrogative
who was elected?find out who they are
used by speakers on all educational levels and by many reputable writers, though disapproved by some grammarians, as the object of a verb or a following preposition
who did I see but a Spanish lady Padraic Columdo not know who the message is from G. K. Chesterton
2
: the person or persons that : whoever
3
used as a function word to introduce a relative clause
used especially in reference to persons
my father, who was a lawyer
but also in reference to groups
a generation who had known nothing but war R. B. West
or to animals
dogs who … fawn all over tramps Nigel Balchin
or to inanimate objects especially with the implication that the reference is really to a person
earlier sources who maintain a Davidic ancestry F. M. Cross
used by speakers on all educational levels and by many reputable writers, though disapproved by some grammarians, as the object of a verb or a following preposition
a character who we are meant to pityThe Times Literary Supplement (London)
whom or who?: Usage Guide

Observers of the language have been predicting the demise of whom from about 1870 down to the present day.

one of the pronoun cases is visibly disappearing—the objective case whom R. G. White (1870)
whom is dying out in England, where "Whom did you see?" sounds affected Anthony Burgess (1980)

Our evidence shows that no one—English or not—should expect whom to disappear momentarily; it shows every indication of persisting quite a while yet. Actual usage of who and whom—accurately described at the entries in this dictionary—does not appear to be markedly different from the usage of Shakespeare's time. But the 18th century grammarians, propounding rules and analogies, rejecting other rules and analogies, and usually justifying both with appeals to Latin or Greek, have intervened between us and Shakespeare. It seems clear that the grammarians' rules have had little effect on the traditional uses. One thing they have accomplished is to encourage hypercorrect uses of whom.

whom shall I say is calling?

Another is that they have made some people unsure of themselves.

said he was asked to step down, although it is not known exactly who or whom asked him Redding (Conn.) Pilot

that, which, or who?: Usage Guide

In current usage that refers to persons or things, which chiefly to things and rarely to subhuman entities, who chiefly to persons and sometimes to animals. The notion that that should not be used to refer to persons is without foundation; such use is entirely standard. Because that has no genitive form or construction, of which or whose must be substituted for it in contexts that call for the genitive.

That vs. Which: Usage Guide

Although some handbooks say otherwise, that and which are both regularly used to introduce restrictive clauses in edited prose. Which is also used to introduce nonrestrictive clauses. That was formerly used to introduce nonrestrictive clauses; such use is virtually nonexistent in present-day edited prose, though it may occasionally be found in poetry.

WHO

2 of 2

abbreviation

World Health Organization
Phrases
as who
archaic : as one that : as if someone
as who should say
archaic : so to speak
who is who or who's who or who was who
: the identity of or the noteworthy facts about each of a number of persons

Word History

Etymology

Pronoun

Middle English, from Old English hwā; akin to Old High German hwer, interrogative pronoun, who, Latin quis, Greek tis, Latin qui, relative pronoun, who

First Known Use

Pronoun

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of who was before the 12th century
BNC: 45 COCA: 38

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