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Should I put myself last? me and my friends vs. my friends and me . . . You should use you and I when this acts as a subject and me and you when this acts as an object The first half of your second example isn't wrong because of the word order (ie Me and my friends vs My friends and me) it is wrong because me can't be the subject of the sentence
It was me or It was I - English Language Learners Stack Exchange It was me that who salted the earth around your flower deck -- (which sounds less formal) Both are correct, but because it's a test question in a grammar book, and grammar books usually prefer the formal alternative, I think it wants this as the answer: It was I who
how do I access my @me. com account or… - Apple Community Originally I had a @me com account and then I moved over to an @icloud com account However I am uncertain it the @me is still active or should I just delete it off my devices
When is me used as a possessive pronoun, instead of my? Me, instead of my, as a possessive, is non-standard English and is used widely throughout the UK, largely among the less educated It falls into the same category as using 'them' instead of 'those' and 'hisself' instead of 'himself'
pronouns - Which one is correct to say: Its me or Its I . . . 32 "It is ME" is not grammatically correct in the academic sense, but is used in spoken English "It is I" is grammatically correct in the pure sense, but would never be used in spoken English - or very rarely by people who speak in an ultra-formal dialect "It is I" would have been correct in Shakespeare's time, in spoken English, but not now
I and someone, me and someone or I and someone we I and someone is grammatical; me and someone is not strictly grammatical, but is very common; I and someone we is not grammatical, and sounds wrong to native English speakers
Me who is or me who am? [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . . Interestingly, I found one case where Ngram only has "me who is" and no "me who am", but it is still less prevalent than the variant with "I who am" It is the "it-cleft" structure "it is _ who _": The cleft structure seems to me to be a special case since it's likely speakers' judgments are influenced by the presence of the pronoun "it"