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spanferkel14
11 months ago

Where are you going?

  • I’m leaving the Doctor. (to + the = to)
  • I’m leaving the Physiotherapy and afterwards the Piano lesson. (to + the = to)

To whom are you going?

  • The doctor, the I’m going, I got his practice on the marketplace.
  • The doctor, the I’m leaving, Dr. Flessner.
  • I’m leaving the Physiotherapists who also treat my husband.
  • I’m leaving the Piano teacher with my brother.
  • I’m leaving to a friend.
  • I’m leaving to my grandparents.
  • I’m leaving to Simon.
  • I’m leaving to Noem. I’m going to the park to relax a little.

In a Question for persons preposition + question pronouns are never written together, e.g.:

  • To whom do you think? For whom are you doing this? To whom were you waiting?
  • To whom are you going? With whom are you going on vacation? From whom have you got the book?

In a Question about things and abstracts you write “wo+(r)+preposition”. You do, too, if you don’t know if it’s a thing or a person. For example:

  • Root do you think? For do you need that? On were you waiting?
  • What is that good? With do you smell lamb? Of which are you dreaming?
Dultus, UserMod Light
11 months ago

Hello dear,

“To whom do you want?”

“Zuwem” is not a German word.

Best regards

Obito521
11 months ago

To whom reads better than to whom, of course โ€œZu_wemโ€

Rotblauadler
11 months ago

to whom of course… Red-blue eagle

Giuli14
11 months ago

To whom is right

edgar1279
11 months ago

to whom

The other is not

maexchen1999
11 months ago

To whom

ajkcdajefiu
11 months ago

to whom

HONEY596
11 months ago

To whom

ohwehohach
11 months ago

To whom.

grisu2101
11 months ago

To whom!