Channel: Anglo-Link
Category: Education
Tags: minoominoo anglo-linkquestionsenglish grammarrelative pronounswho or whosegrammaranglo-link english grammaronline english courseenglishwhomenglish conversationminoo english grammarconversationanglo-linkwho or whomenglish questionswhoseenglish courseonline englishonlinepronounsrelativewhominoo english
Description: Download my free guide ‘6 Ways to Become a Confident English Speaker through Listening’ at: start.anglo-link.com When do we use 'who' and when do we use 'whom' in a question? Which one do we use as a relative pronoun? What about 'whose'? Find out the answers to these questions in this 'English grammar in conversation' lesson. Interested in joining my complete course? Then, you can choose between: 1. Online membership at anglo-link.com Set up your own study plan on the Anglo-Link platform and progress at your own pace. Membership plans start at $6.49 / month. Not sure it's the right course for you? You can set up a free account and explore the content first. 2. Intensive 13-week 'Bootcamp' at listening.anglo-link.com/bootcamp If you need fast results, this option can get you to the C1 level in 13 weeks. Choose this if you can study for at least one hour a day, and you're happy to try my 'Focused Listening' method and follow my recommendations closely. To learn more about my 'Focused Listening' method, download my free guide: ‘6 Ways to Become a Confident English Speaker through Listening’ at: start.anglo-link.com 00:00 Introduction 00:22 Question word 'who' 00:39 Question word 'whom' 02:22 Question word 'whose' 02:46 Relative Pronoun 'who' 04:22 Relative Pronoun 'whom' 05:39 Relative Pronoun 'whose' 06:16 Common question Watch my complete lesson on Relative Pronouns here: youtu.be/lLkARyk4CTI Join me on Facebook: facebook.com/AngloLink A little about me: My name is Minoo. I’m originally from Iran, and I live and work in the U.K. I’m a qualified English teacher and teacher trainer, but that’s not what makes me good at my job. I just love teaching! It makes me feel good when I can share something I’ve learned with others. That’s why I still love teaching English after 40 years of doing it! English is such a vast and complicated language! My passion is to make it as easy as possible for others to learn. My students always praise my ‘clear explanations’ and 'structured method'. I suppose I can explain things well because I’m not a native speaker. I’ve struggled with English grammar, pronunciation, and vocabulary myself. I’ve had to work out the rules and learn the exceptions, and I just love sharing my own discoveries with others like me who are learning English as a foreign language. Thank you so much, everyone, for all the ‘likes’ and your lovely and supportive comments! I'm so grateful for your support!