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I, Me, Myself

The readers of this blog are self-selecting and would be very unlikely to mispronounce “crisps”, as in; “A packet of cheese and onion crips, please”.

However, they might say “…between you and I,…” and they would be wrong.

I am conscious of the need for sub-editors, but nowadays we have to be our own sub-editors. This post is intended to help with one particular issue, the use of “I” and “me”.

When you are the subject of a statement or sentence, you use “I”; when you are the object of a statement or sentence, you use “me”.

Find the verb and decide; is it acting on “you” or are “you” the person acting?

Here are some examples. The verb is “threaten”; who is doing the threatening and who is being threatened?:

Brian Cowen threatened me” Correct. I am the object.

“Brian Cowen threatened I” . Incorrect. I am the object.

“I threatened Brian Cowen” . Correct. I am the subject.

“Me threatened Brian Cowen”. Incorrect. I am the subject.

“My wife and I threatened Brian Cowen”. Correct. I (with my wife) am the compound subject.

“My wife and me threatened Brian Cowen”. Incorrect. I (with my wife) am the compound subject.

“Brian Cowen threatened my wife and me..” Correct. I (with my wife) am the compound object.

“Brian Cowen threatened my wife and I..” Incorrect. I (with my wife) am the compound object.

Get the first four examples right and the compound examples will fall more readily into place.

Where you are part of a compound subject or object, it is courteous to place the reference to “you” last; “Bill and I…” not “I and Bill…”; “My wife and I…” not “I and my wife…”; or “…Bill and me” not “…me and Bill”.

“Myself” is a reflexive pronoun. A reflexive pronoun is used when the subject and the object of the verb are the same.

“I promised myself”

It can also be used for emphasis; “I don’t see it, myself”. An interesting use for this purpose is “Myself I shall adore” from Handel’s work “Semele“.

However, “myself” is not a substitute for “I” or “me”; you ought not to say “Myself and my dog…” or My dog and myself…”

4 Comments

  1. How about “meself” as in …

    “Sure, meself and herself and the dog go for a walk every Sunday”

    ..c’mon that must be proper English!

  2. All of these examples are incorrect. You have misspelt ‘Cowen’.

  3. Thank you Antoin. I repeat; there is great need for sub-editing.

  4. Antoin, errors now corrected.