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Grammar

Relative Clauses 3: whose / whom / where

Using whose for possession, whom in formal contexts, and where for places in relative clauses

whose — Showing Possession

Use whose in a relative clause to show that something belongs to the person you are talking about. It replaces his, her, their, or a possessive noun.

  • We contacted a supplier whose prices were lower than the competition. (= their prices were lower)
  • That’s the manager whose team won the quarterly sales award. (= her team won)
  • I spoke to a colleague whose brother works at our Tokyo office. (= his brother works there)

who vs. whose

Do not mix up who and whose. Who refers to the person directly. Whose refers to something that belongs to the person.

ClauseMeaning
a colleague who speaks Mandarinthe colleague speaks Mandarin
a colleague whose wife speaks Mandarinthe colleague’s wife speaks Mandarin

whose vs. who’s

These sound identical but are completely different.

WordWhat it isExample
whosepossessiveAn employee whose contract ends in March.
who’sshort for who is or who hasAn employee who’s leaving in March. (= who is leaving)

If you can expand it to “who is” or “who has”, write who’s. Otherwise, write whose.

whom — Formal Object Pronoun

Whom can replace who when the person is the object of the verb in the relative clause.

  • The recruiter whom I spoke to was very helpful. (I spoke to the recruiter — “the recruiter” is the object)

You can also place a preposition directly before whom:

  • She’s a colleague with whom I’ve worked for five years. (= I’ve worked with her)
  • The candidate to whom we offered the position has accepted. (= we offered the position to him)

whom is formal

In everyday English, especially in speech, people drop whom entirely or use who/that instead.

Formal (written)Everyday
the client whom I emailedthe client I emailed
a partner with whom we collaboratea partner we collaborate with

Both forms are correct. Use whom (especially preposition + whom) in formal reports, business letters, and professional writing. In casual emails or conversation, the everyday version is fine.

where — Talking About Places

Use where in a relative clause to refer to a place. It replaces there, in it, at that place, etc.

  • The office where I work is on the 12th floor. (= I work there)
  • We visited the factory where the components are assembled.
  • Is there a meeting room where we can talk privately?

the day / the time / the reason — No Relative Word Needed

With time expressions like the day, the year, the last time, and with the reason, you can leave out the relative word entirely.

  • Friday is the day we submit the weekly report.
  • Do you remember the year the company went public?
  • The last time I checked, the shipment hadn’t arrived.
  • The reason I’m calling is to confirm tomorrow’s agenda.

You can also use that in these sentences:

  • Friday is the day that we submit the weekly report.
  • The reason that I’m calling is to confirm tomorrow’s agenda.

With reason, you may also hear why, but it is optional:

  • The reason why she turned down the offer was the relocation.

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

We hired a consultant _____ expertise is in supply chain management.

Select your answer:

Question 2

The director _____ I reported to has retired.

Select your answer:

Question 3

Is that the warehouse _____ they store the raw materials?

Select your answer:

Question 4

I have a colleague _____ just been promoted to VP.

Select your answer:

Question 5

The reason _____ the project was delayed was a shortage of materials.

Select your answer:

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