'Whom' is used when you are referring to the object of the verb. 'Who' is used when you are referring to the subject of the verb.'Who is there?''Who broke that vase?''For whom is that parcel...
(Get to means find a path or colloquially, a method to accomplish something.)"I could not find a way to get to the parade.""With luck, I will get to retire next year."
Those who profess to favor freedom, yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground.
Deprecate means to express disapproval of something.
I have thought about this when conversing with people who consider English a second language. This awkward construction might be considered an idiom. It is commonly used but is not properly...
"At" and "in" can be used in any prepositional phrase, such as "The piano can be found "in" the music room" or "the sonata was played "at" the end of the recital.