Whom use, even correct use but especially incorrect use, can signal an excessive concern with pedantry.
Whom use...can signal an excessive concern with pedantry
Speaking of pedantry, I have no doubt that you meant:
“Whom” use
Alternatively, if it’s done by someone whom you already know decently well, and who you know isn’t really a crazy obsessive pedant, it can instead signal a liking of international or British English over American.
It’s possible to avoid the “whom” and be grammatical: “*Who* is Being Called a Cult Leader By You?”.
“If there’s something strange in your neighborhood, who is gonna be called by you? Ghostbusters!”
Whom use, even correct use but especially incorrect use, can signal an excessive concern with pedantry.
Speaking of pedantry, I have no doubt that you meant:
Alternatively, if it’s done by someone whom you already know decently well, and who you know isn’t really a crazy obsessive pedant, it can instead signal a liking of international or British English over American.
It’s possible to avoid the “whom” and be grammatical: “*Who* is Being Called a Cult Leader By You?”.
“If there’s something strange in your neighborhood, who is gonna be called by you? Ghostbusters!”