toothless123 wrote:
My understanding is that "whom" is used if the noun which "whom" refers to is the object of the verb. In the context of option E, last clause( "many of whom are members of hill tribes..." ), how does this work out?
Is this another use case of"whom"?
Technically, yes, it is a different case. We do use "whom", at least in very formal writing, when it is an object of a verb. We also use it in what is called the "genitive case" in grammar
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