Last visit was: 18 Nov 2025, 22:59 It is currently 18 Nov 2025, 22:59
Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
505-555 Level|   Pronouns|                  
User avatar
pi10t
Joined: 20 Jun 2005
Last visit: 15 Sep 2007
Posts: 74
Own Kudos:
1,683
 [181]
Posts: 74
Kudos: 1,683
 [181]
13
Kudos
Add Kudos
167
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Most Helpful Reply
User avatar
GMATNinja
User avatar
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
Joined: 13 Aug 2009
Last visit: 18 Nov 2025
Posts: 7,445
Own Kudos:
69,779
 [61]
Given Kudos: 2,060
Status: GMAT/GRE/LSAT tutors
Location: United States (CO)
GMAT 1: 780 Q51 V46
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Posts: 7,445
Kudos: 69,779
 [61]
28
Kudos
Add Kudos
33
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
User avatar
Marcab
Joined: 03 Feb 2011
Last visit: 22 Jan 2021
Posts: 850
Own Kudos:
4,852
 [15]
Given Kudos: 221
Status:Retaking after 7 years
Location: United States (NY)
Concentration: Finance, Economics
GMAT 1: 720 Q49 V39
GPA: 3.75
GMAT 1: 720 Q49 V39
Posts: 850
Kudos: 4,852
 [15]
5
Kudos
Add Kudos
10
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
General Discussion
User avatar
GMATBLACKBELT
Joined: 29 Mar 2007
Last visit: 03 Jun 2013
Posts: 1,139
Own Kudos:
1,878
 [5]
Posts: 1,139
Kudos: 1,878
 [5]
2
Kudos
Add Kudos
3
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
pi10t
Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
(B) one of them who
(C) and one of them who
(D) one of whom
(E) one of which


D

Requires object pronoun "whom" not the subject pronoun who.

one of which is just wrong, which cannot refer to people.
User avatar
jade3
Joined: 19 Nov 2007
Last visit: 27 Dec 2010
Posts: 96
Own Kudos:
892
 [2]
Given Kudos: 1
Posts: 96
Kudos: 892
 [2]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
1
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
IMO “one who is blind” is like saying there is only one blind person out of the total presenters and “one of whom is blind” is like saying that there could be more than one blind person in the group.

This sentence may not require pin pointing a blind person out of all total presenters to demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers. Any blind person would do. Hence D could be the correct choice.
User avatar
mourinhogmat1
Joined: 08 Jun 2010
Last visit: 11 Aug 2015
Posts: 213
Own Kudos:
199
 [4]
Given Kudos: 13
Location: United States
Concentration: General Management, Finance
GMAT 1: 680 Q50 V32
GMAT 1: 680 Q50 V32
Posts: 213
Kudos: 199
 [4]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
3
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
(B) one of them who
(C) and one of them who
(D) one of whom
(E) one of which

Quick test for who and whom is to ask what does the who or whom refer to? It refers to the presenters which is plural. So, we would normally use "them" to refer to the presenters. Thus we can straight away rule out A, B and C. E is absurd because "which" is used to refer to objects/animals (?).
avatar
Maryam787
Joined: 31 Aug 2012
Last visit: 18 Feb 2013
Posts: 15
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 52
GPA: 3.65
Posts: 15
Kudos: 10
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
pi10t
Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
(B) one of them who
(C) and one of them who
(D) one of whom
(E) one of which


I was confused between B and D.... I opted B...but can't understand my mistake,,
avatar
purnima
Joined: 20 Nov 2009
Last visit: 08 Nov 2014
Posts: 15
Own Kudos:
5
 [2]
Given Kudos: 11
Products:
Posts: 15
Kudos: 5
 [2]
Kudos
Add Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
pi10t
Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
(B) one of them who
(C) and one of them who
(D) one of whom
(E) one of which


I want verification of my analysis .I approcached the sentence as under :

1. Understood the meaning that among the presenters , there is one person who is blind and he will demonstrate..
2.Broke the sentence into clauses:

C1:Presenters at the seminar, one
C2:who is blind,
C1 (contd):will demonstrate adaptive equipment
C3: that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

2. Clause 1 doest not make one will demonstrate .....

3. Applied rule that after preposition only object pronoun whom can come , so eliminated B, C.
4.Applied rule which can refer only inanimate objects.Hence eliminated ans E

4. Arrived at answer D.


Doubt:

1. Can which refer to animals ?/ As per my current understanding that and which can only refer to inanimate objects.
Hence, they cannot refer to animals.
2.Who / Whom can refer to only human being ? Can they refer to animals ?As per my current understanding who and whom can refer to both animals and human beings.
3.Is one 'a pronoun?
User avatar
bgpower
Joined: 03 Aug 2011
Last visit: 14 Mar 2017
Posts: 267
Own Kudos:
118
 [7]
Given Kudos: 916
Concentration: Strategy, Finance
GMAT 1: 640 Q44 V34
GMAT 2: 700 Q42 V44
GMAT 3: 680 Q44 V39
GMAT 4: 740 Q49 V41
GPA: 3.7
WE:Project Management (Energy)
Products:
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
6
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
If you can replace it with they -> WHO
If you can replace it with them -> WHOM

... The kind of rules you ca find in the pill ...
User avatar
EMPOWERgmatVerbal
User avatar
EMPOWERgmat Instructor
Joined: 23 Feb 2015
Last visit: 17 Feb 2025
Posts: 1,694
Own Kudos:
15,175
 [3]
Given Kudos: 766
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 1,694
Kudos: 15,175
 [3]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Hi pi10t,

Thank you for your question. This is classic case of a "who vs. whom" sentence, so let's look at each answer and if they are conveying the proper meaning:

Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
By using "who," it now refers back to the word "seminar" and not to the presenters. The seminar can't be blind, so this is INCORRECT.

(B) one of them who
Again, by using "who," it refers back to the seminar being blind. It also adds in a vague pronoun "them" with no clear antecedent. Therefore, this one is also INCORRECT.

(C) and one of them who
This is the same answer as B, but with the word "and" added in. That doesn't fix the problems with who/whom or the vague pronoun "them," so it's INCORRECT.

(D) one of whom
This is the CORRECT answer because by using "whom," it's clear the phrase is referring back to one of the presenters being blind, not one of the seminars.

(E) one of which
This is INCORRECT because in the GMAT, one should never use "which" to refer to people - only animals or objects.
User avatar
dabaobao
Joined: 24 Oct 2016
Last visit: 20 Jun 2022
Posts: 570
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 143
GMAT 1: 670 Q46 V36
GMAT 2: 690 Q47 V38
GMAT 3: 690 Q48 V37
GMAT 4: 710 Q49 V38 (Online)
GMAT 4: 710 Q49 V38 (Online)
Posts: 570
Kudos: 1,638
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
pi10t
Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
(B) one of them who
(C) and one of them who
(D) one of whom
(E) one of which


Marcab


Hii Maryam.
In B, "who" is modifying "them" but since the helping verb after "who" is "is", we need a singular noun. Hence B is incorrect. Also there is one more mistake in B. Whenever you come across such sentences such as "one of X(Always Plural) who/that" always remember that verb to be followed has to be PLURAL.
In short:
One of X(Always Plural) who/that Y(Always Plural verb)
BUT
One of X(Always Plural) (Always Singular Verb)

Another major mistake in the question. "One of whom" and other options are incorrectly modifying "Seminar". This is a weird question. If it were "At the seminar the presenters, one of whom is blind, will bla bla bla", then it would have been right.
Hope that helps.
-s


VeritasKarishma GMATNinja

Could you please explain why D is correct and B is wrong? I believe we should use "who" instead of "whom" since that pronoun is being used to modify the subject and not the object. Marcab 's explanation seems to make sense why B might be wrong but D seems to be wrong too because it uses "whom".
avatar
JackH
Joined: 24 Oct 2013
Last visit: 03 Oct 2023
Posts: 21
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 421
GMAT 1: 630 Q47 V29
GMAT 2: 650 Q48 V31
GMAT 3: 570 Q47 V23
GMAT 4: 620 Q49 V24
WE:Operations (Energy)
GMAT 4: 620 Q49 V24
Posts: 21
Kudos: 27
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
GMATNinja
dabaobao
pi10t
Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
(B) one of them who
(C) and one of them who
(D) one of whom
(E) one of which


Marcab


Hii Maryam.
In B, "who" is modifying "them" but since the helping verb after "who" is "is", we need a singular noun. Hence B is incorrect. Also there is one more mistake in B. Whenever you come across such sentences such as "one of X(Always Plural) who/that" always remember that verb to be followed has to be PLURAL.
In short:
One of X(Always Plural) who/that Y(Always Plural verb)
BUT
One of X(Always Plural) (Always Singular Verb)

Another major mistake in the question. "One of whom" and other options are incorrectly modifying "Seminar". This is a weird question. If it were "At the seminar the presenters, one of whom is blind, will bla bla bla", then it would have been right.
Hope that helps.
-s


VeritasKarishma GMATNinja

Could you please explain why D is correct and B is wrong? I believe we should use "who" instead of "whom" since that pronoun is being used to modify the subject and not the object. Marcab 's explanation seems to make sense why B might be wrong but D seems to be wrong too because it uses "whom".
The question of whether to use "who" or "whom" isn't determined by what noun the pronoun refers to, but rather by the grammatical role the pronoun plays.

If the word is a subject (the "doer" of an action), we use "who." If the word is an object (the recipient of an action) we use "whom." For example, "My wife, who is extremely kind and generous, volunteers every Monday at a homeless shelter." Here, "who" is the subject of the verb "is."

But I could also write, "My wife, to whom I send flowers every day, is a wonderful person." In that last sentence, my wife is the object of the preposition, so she "receives" the action (sending flowers) -- and as a result, we'd need to use "whom" and not "who".

In (D) "whom" is the object of the preposition "of," so it's correct. In (B) "one of them who" is just plain bad. Why would we use back-to-back pronouns? Is "who" referring to "them?" To "one"? It's unnecessarily clunky and confusing.

I hope that helps!

Hi GMATNinja I am a big fan of your verbal analysis response, and you are doing a great service for GMAT Club members.
I would like to ask one particular doubt that is simple but yet to settle down for me.
In the above example you quote "My wife, who is extremely kind and generous, volunteers every Monday at a homeless shelter." Here, "who" serves as subject within the non-essential clause and so it is followed by verb "is".
In the 2nd example that you quote "My wife, to whom I send flowers every day, is a wonderful person." , here in non-essential clause "whom" is the object of preposition, but the subject is "I" and the verb is "send".
Whereas in the OA, i.e., D "one of whom" is blind; what is the subject for which "whom" is required to be used as receiver of the action. Cant we consider the non-essential clause with a subject pronoun such as - "one who is blind".
I know you are a very busy person, but I hope you reply me as early as possible as next week I am having my exam.
Thank You.
User avatar
GMATNinja
User avatar
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
Joined: 13 Aug 2009
Last visit: 18 Nov 2025
Posts: 7,445
Own Kudos:
69,779
 [10]
Given Kudos: 2,060
Status: GMAT/GRE/LSAT tutors
Location: United States (CO)
GMAT 1: 780 Q51 V46
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Posts: 7,445
Kudos: 69,779
 [10]
3
Kudos
Add Kudos
7
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Quote:
I would like to ask one particular doubt that is simple but yet to settle down for me.
In the above example you quote "My wife, who is extremely kind and generous, volunteers every Monday at a homeless shelter." Here, "who" serves as subject within the non-essential clause and so it is followed by verb "is".
In the 2nd example that you quote "My wife, to whom I send flowers every day, is a wonderful person." , here in non-essential clause "whom" is the object of preposition, but the subject is "I" and the verb is "send".
Whereas in the OA, i.e., D "one of whom" is blind; what is the subject for which "whom" is required to be used as receiver of the action. Cant we consider the non-essential clause with a subject pronoun such as - "one who is blind".
I know you are a very busy person, but I hope you reply me as early as possible as next week I am having my exam.
Thank You.
Apologies for the slow response! I'm obviously too late to be helpful for you, but if it's any consolation, this particular issue is extremely rare on the GMAT.

Anytime we have a plural subject and want to modify some portion of this larger group, we'll introduce a phrase like "one of whom," or "some of which" to differentiate between the larger subject of the main clause and the smaller subject of the modifying clause. For example, "The paintings in the Louvre, one of which was defaced by a toddler with a paint gun, proved to be a disappointment to the tourist from Queens." The phrase "one of which" differentiates between the painting that was defaced by the toddler and the larger group introduced in the subject of the sentence.

However, the sentence "The paintings in the Louvre, one which was defaced by a toddler with a paint gun, proved to be a disappointment," isn't acceptable usage. A native speaker would instinctively feel that something is off about this construction, but the reason it's objectively problematic is that it's confusing. One of what? Without the "of" it's not entirely clear that I'm talking about a member of the group in the subject. Perhaps I've introduced a new group. At the very least, you'd have to reread the sentence a couple of times to get a handle on what the writer is trying to communicate, and on the GMAT, clarity trumps murkiness every time.

The same issue applies to your question. If we have "Presenters at the seminar, one of whom is blind..." the phrase "one of whom" indicates that we're talking about a member of the original group of presenters. If we have "Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind" it's not entirely clear that the "one" is a member of a larger group -- it's a confusing phrase, and it almost sounds like the seminar is blind.

I hope that helps!
avatar
bratbg
Joined: 27 Mar 2019
Last visit: 19 Dec 2022
Posts: 71
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 225
Location: India
GMAT 1: 650 Q48 V32
GMAT 2: 680 Q49 V34
GPA: 3
GMAT 2: 680 Q49 V34
Posts: 71
Kudos: 17
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
hi experts
can you please explain why B is incorrect?

AjiteshArun egmat GMATNinja carcass
User avatar
daagh
User avatar
Major Poster
Joined: 19 Feb 2007
Last visit: 16 Oct 2020
Posts: 5,264
Own Kudos:
42,417
 [1]
Given Kudos: 422
Status: enjoying
Location: India
WE:Education (Education)
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 5,264
Kudos: 42,417
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
I wonder what the core meaning of the sentence is and why that parenthesis is intruding. The subject is the 'presenters' and the verb is 'will demonstrate'. The parenthetical modifier in between the commas is just a supplement even without which the sentence can give sensible meaning. Therefore let us us not bother whether it one who is blind, or one of them who is blind, or and one of them who is or one of whom is blind or one of which is blind.

If the author really wanted to mean that one of the presenters who is byline will demonstrate, then she should have worded it as 'The one blind presenter at the seminar will demonstrate" and should have taken away the parenthesis.

Without that, it looks all the five choices look like the same in effect. The take-away: If some info is critical to the intent, then one should not de-essentialism it as a parenthesis.
User avatar
PrashantK0099
Joined: 09 Sep 2020
Last visit: 27 Oct 2020
Posts: 64
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 45
Location: United States
Concentration: Finance, General Management
Posts: 64
Kudos: 46
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
daagh

is one of them who in B is grammatically wrong. ?
User avatar
mSKR
Joined: 14 Aug 2019
Last visit: 10 Mar 2024
Posts: 1,290
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 381
Location: Hong Kong
Concentration: Strategy, Marketing
GMAT 1: 650 Q49 V29
GPA: 3.81
GMAT 1: 650 Q49 V29
Posts: 1,290
Kudos: 938
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
EMPOWERgmatVerbal
HI pi10t,

Thank you for your question. This is classic case of a "who vs. whom" sentence, so let's look at each answer and if they are conveying the proper meaning:

Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
By using "who," it now refers back to the word "seminar" and not to the presenters. The seminar can't be blind, so this is INCORRECT.

(B) one of them who
Again, by using "who," it refers back to the seminar being blind. It also adds in a vague pronoun "them" with no clear antecedent. Therefore, this one is also INCORRECT.

(C) and one of them who
This is the same answer as B, but with the word "and" added in. That doesn't fix the problems with who/whom or the vague pronoun "them," so it's INCORRECT.

(D) one of whom
This is the CORRECT answer because by using "whom," it's clear the phrase is referring back to one of the presenters being blind, not one of the seminars.

(E) one of which
This is INCORRECT because in the GMAT, one should never use "which" to refer to people - only animals or objects.


Hi EMPOWERgmatVerbal

Can you please advise why one in one of whom refers to presenters ; not seminars but one in one who refers to seminars.
Can you give some insights to understand the concept.

Thanks!
User avatar
EMPOWERgmatVerbal
User avatar
EMPOWERgmat Instructor
Joined: 23 Feb 2015
Last visit: 17 Feb 2025
Posts: 1,694
Own Kudos:
15,175
 [5]
Given Kudos: 766
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 1,694
Kudos: 15,175
 [5]
3
Kudos
Add Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
imSKR
EMPOWERgmatVerbal
HI pi10t,

Thank you for your question. This is classic case of a "who vs. whom" sentence, so let's look at each answer and if they are conveying the proper meaning:

Presenters at the seminar, one who is blind, will demonstrate adaptive equipment that allows visually impaired people to use computers.

(A) one who
By using "who," it now refers back to the word "seminar" and not to the presenters. The seminar can't be blind, so this is INCORRECT.

(B) one of them who
Again, by using "who," it refers back to the seminar being blind. It also adds in a vague pronoun "them" with no clear antecedent. Therefore, this one is also INCORRECT.

(C) and one of them who
This is the same answer as B, but with the word "and" added in. That doesn't fix the problems with who/whom or the vague pronoun "them," so it's INCORRECT.

(D) one of whom
This is the CORRECT answer because by using "whom," it's clear the phrase is referring back to one of the presenters being blind, not one of the seminars.

(E) one of which
This is INCORRECT because in the GMAT, one should never use "which" to refer to people - only animals or objects.


Hi EMPOWERgmatVerbal

Can you please advise why one in one of whom refers to presenters ; not seminars but one in one who refers to seminars.
Can you give some insights to understand the concept.

Thanks!

Great question imSKR!

We know that who/whom is a tricky thing to master! In this case, we need to figure out if what we need is a subjective or objective case here. The best way to figure this out is to replace who/whom with either a subjective or objective pronoun, and whichever works best is the direction you go into:

WHO = subjective = can replace with: he/she/they
WHOM = objective = can replace with: him/her/them

Now, let's break down our options by replacing who with "they" and whom with "them" to see which one works best:

(A) one who is blind --> one they is blind --> WRONG
(B) one of them who --> one of them they --> WRONG ("one of them" and "who" are competing with each other to refer to the same thing)
(C) and one of them who --> and one of them they --> WRONG (same reason as option B, but added "and" in there for some reason)
(D) one of whom --> one of them --> CORRECT
(E) one of which --> WRONG ("which" is a relative pronoun that should only refer to things, not people)

We hope that helps! Tag us at EMPOWERgmatVerbal if you have any other questions! :)
User avatar
EducationAisle
Joined: 27 Mar 2010
Last visit: 18 Nov 2025
Posts: 3,891
Own Kudos:
3,579
 [1]
Given Kudos: 159
Location: India
Schools: ISB
GPA: 3.31
Expert
Expert reply
Schools: ISB
Posts: 3,891
Kudos: 3,579
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
PrashantK0099
daagh

is one of them who in B is grammatically wrong. ?
Hi PrashantK0099, at best, this structure is redundant.

We can either say:

one of them blind

Or

one of whom is blind
User avatar
PrashantK0099
Joined: 09 Sep 2020
Last visit: 27 Oct 2020
Posts: 64
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 45
Location: United States
Concentration: Finance, General Management
Posts: 64
Kudos: 46
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Dear Ashish Sir,

Thanks for this wonderful explanation.
Its crystal clear now
Thanks a ton :)


EducationAisle
PrashantK0099
daagh

is one of them who in B is grammatically wrong. ?
Hi PrashantK0099, at best, this structure is redundant.

We can either say:

one of them blind

Or

one of whom is blind
 1   2   
Moderators:
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
7445 posts
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
234 posts
188 posts