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Quick math question for the geeks here...

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Ok so you remember how lance's neighbors cat got caught in my car's engine??

Well, turns out bits of cat somehow got sucked into my cars engine and screwed it all to hell.

Anyway, so my buddy Lance is asking his dad if I can sue the neighbor for their cat fucking up my ride. So I gotta go to his dad's office in a couplea hours and figure out how to get them to pay for the damages, on account of they're cat coming into Lances lot and fucking everythang up.

So does anyone know when to best use whom rather then who???
 
This sounds like a job for larry the cable guy...geterdone!
 
'any who' ........ that is what you should use.
 
Examples

Who are you?
To Whom am I speaking?

Who is a direct qualifier, while whom is an indirect qualifier.

Cheers,
Scotsman
 
Scotsman said:
Examples

Who are you?
To Whom am I speaking?

Who is a direct qualifier, while whom is an indirect qualifier.

Cheers,
Scotsman

Now did you use a zeta function to get this answer?
Can I see your work?
 
Code said:
Now did you use a zeta function to get this answer?
Can I see your work?


No on the zeta, and you don't have high enough security clearance to view my solution.

Cheers,
Scotsman
 
Scotsman said:
No on the zeta, and you don't have high enough security clearance to view my solution.

Cheers,
Scotsman
But you gave me the solution....

Wow, Lance and me are confused.
 
Code said:
But you gave me the solution....

Wow, Lance and me are confused.


I gave you the answer, not the solution/proof.

And maybe Lance just doesn't want to explain it to you.

Cheers,
Scotsman
 
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