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Most of which or most of whom or most of who? Since "most of _____" is a prepositional phrase, the correct usage would be "most of whom " The phrase "most of who" should probably never be used Another way to think about the difference between the subjective objective pronouns is to revise the sentence to include a personal pronoun and see which form (he him or she her or they them) fit
Subject-verb agreement: Most of the x of y is are? In your 1st example, the head of the subject NP is the fused determiner-head 'most', not plural 'paperbacks' ‘Most’ can occur with both singular and plural partitives, but here ‘that rack’ denotes a singular item and the matrix NP 'most of that rack' denotes a singular subpart of that item; hence singular agreement is correct, (cf ‘Most of those paperbacks are trash’, where the
verb agreement - Most of what and is or are - English Language . . . In your example, books ARE what you have read most, so I would agree that in diagrammatic reasoning most of what you've read ARE books Of all of the various materials I've read, most ARE books Therefore, because MOST refers to books, and BOOKS is a plural noun, I'm sorry to say that your friend is correct
What does the word most mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Most is defined by the attributes you apply to it "Most of your time" would imply more than half, "the most time" implies more than the rest in your stated set Your time implies your total time, where the most time implies more than the rest I think "most" leads to a great deal of ambiguity
Most is vs most are - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Most is what is called a determiner A determiner is "a word, such as a number, article, personal pronoun, that determines (limits) the meaning of a noun phrase " Some determiners can only be used with either a countable noun or an uncountable noun, while others, like most, can be used with both countable and uncountable nouns Uncountable nouns usually take a singular verb So, in your