• SomeoneElseMod@feddit.ukOPM
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    1 year ago

    For anyone unsure when to use I or me, remove the “and X” and see if the sentence makes sense:

    My twin and I in the 80s > I in the 80s ❎

    Me and my twin in the 80s > me in the 80s ✅

      • nogooduser@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I think that the way we were taught it was wrong.

        It seemed that every time that I used “me and x” I was corrected to say “x and I”. They never gave a reason why it should be “x and I” so it seemed like it should always be that way. I imagine that there were cases where I wasn’t corrected because “me and x” was the correct way to say it but you don’t remember when they don’t correct you.

        • Tenbot@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          For convoluted linguistic reasons, “x and me,” is correct and the default expression in English for this type of subject. If I recall, “x and I” is how it would be said in Latin, and I believe the desire to sound more educated // “proper” (like Latin) was the original reason that this phrase was pushed onto children in schools, by well-intentioned but ignorant school masters.

    • SeabassDan@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      This is good when there’s no verb after, right?

      Me and my twin jumped in the pool.

      Vs

      My twin and I jumped in the pool.

      • weksa@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Incomplete sentences make it difficult, such as the OP.

        Your example is great:

        • Me jumped in the pool.
        • I jumped in the pool.

        The second sentence is correct, so you would go with, “My twin and I jumped in the pool.”

        Similar example:

        • The rain got me and my twin soaking wet.
        • The rain got my twin and I soaking wet.

        Simplify them:

        • The rain got me soaking wet.
        • The rain got I soaking wet.

        The first sentence is correct, so go with, “The rain got me and my twin soaking wet.”