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  1. 16 de jun. de 2020 · "Them," combined with the "who," has to be used with a preposition like "to," "from," or "with." "I pity them," by itself, is a grammatically correct sentence, but when you connect the dependent clause with "who," it is no longer correct.

  2. 23 de jun. de 2011 · We're evidently talking about a category of people (e.g. unmarried mothers) and the sentence refers to that part of them which depends on social assistance, so the relative clause refers to the proportions (of them) and is not an example of "them who".

  3. For this, the answer is not completely straightforward. But here is my (hopefully objective) take: Usage indicates that a clear majority of people prefer to use the accusative case ("it is them"), and there is other evidence to indicate that the accusative is the default case in English.

  4. The notion that "them who" or "them that" are acceptable in the modern language is blind to how the vast majority of people speak English. Proform substitution as a test for constituent structure is widely employed in syntax textbooks.

  5. 5 de mar. de 2010 · 'Who of them' is possible, but rather literary or rhetorical. 'Who among them' is similar. In everyday speech, always 'which of them'.

  6. Them: Created by Little Marvin. With Deborah Ayorinde, Shahadi Wright Joseph, Ashley Thomas, Alison Pill. Anthology horror series with varying characters and locations by season, featuring different aspects of the horror genre.

  7. The main difference between 'whom' and 'them' lies within their parts of speech. Whom is a pronoun widely used as a question word while them is the objective form of the personal pronoun 'they.'