The sentence is correct except for the commas and one or two words.
There should be no commas around the relative clause whom I love because this is a defining relative clause - it is necessary to the meaning of the sentence.
In English, you put commas around a relative clause if it adds additional information. But this information doesn't change the meaning of the sentence.
My neighbor*, whose name is John,* is very friendly and helpful.
The relative clause in this sentence is a non-defining relative clause. It just tells us something more about the noun neighbor, but it isn't necessary to the meaning of what you want to say. If you take the relative clause whose name is John out of the sentence, the sentence still says what you want to say.
My neighbor is very friendly and helpful.
Let's take your sentence:
The girl, whom I love, passes in front of my house daily.
If we take out the relative clause whom I love , the meaning of the sentence changes.
The girl passes in front of my house daily.
The relative clause whom I love is a defining relative clause. That means, it defines the noun (the girl) very clearly. She's the girl you love, not just some girl who walks by your house every day. So, don't put commas around that clause because it's important to the meaning of the sentence.
The girl who/whom I love passes by my house every day.
Tricky question. I liked it.
It can happen bothways.
Opinion 1:
I consider that the pictures belong to some story/event. Storytelling is always in past because the event has happened. However, in some sentences, present tense may be used but that will be special cases. Overall, it'll be in past.
I quickly referred my daughter's text books and found that most of the questions are in past tense. Having said this, it'll be answered in past as well.
The pictures are just for the purpose of illustration and will make kids/the readers understand the scene/scenario and not the tense.
Opinion 2:
You may use the present tense if you are talking about that picture and asking it right now. The way 'find the differences between two pictures comes in newspapers and magazines'. If there's one single picture and it's not a story, you may put a present tense. That's because these questions are based on the picture and not the story. The picture is right in front of you and you are asking questions. The moment, the picture becomes a part of story, and is a kind of lesson you find in text book, it takes past tense to narrate, ask and answer.
Best Answer
Nothing wrong with either. The only difference is your audience. If they don't know who Mary is then her name isn't required. However, if you are talking about many different females in one instance, you may actually need Mary to clarify.