Friday, August 21, 2020
Common Grammatical Errors Between You and Me
Common Grammatical Errors Between You and Me Letâs start with a pop quiz: Is there a grammar mistake in the title of my blog? If you answered âYesâ and believe that âBetween You and Iâ would be correct, you have a lot of company. However, âBetween You and Meâ is actually the correct structure. Why do so many of us say âBetween you and Iâ? My guess is that at some point, maybe around age 8, you may have said to your mother something like, âJimmy and me are going to the store.â She corrected you: âItâs âJimmy and Iââ and something clicked in your head, and you thought that if youâre talking about yourself and another person, you should always say âIâ instead of âme.â Iâm here to set the record straight. There are pronouns that belong as the subject of a sentence. They are: I, you, she, he, we, you, they, it. Then there are pronouns that belong as the object of a sentence. They are: me, you, her, him, us, you, them, it. The first thing you need to know is not to mix these two groups together! âHim and Iâ for instance takes one pronoun from the object group and one from the subject group. Mixing and matching is always incorrect no matter where in the sentence the pronouns fall. âBetween you and meâ is a little trickier because our language uses âyouâ as both subject and object. Which group are we in here? Think about it: Would you say âBetween usâ or âBetween weâ? Of course you would say Between us. Now you know youâre in the object group which includes both âusâ and (would you believe it?) âme.â A nice easy way to determine what pronouns to use, when you want to include two subjects or objects, is to try out the sentence with just one of the subjects or objects and see how it sounds. For example: âI [not me] went to the store.â âHe [not him] went to the store. Therefore, âHe and I went to the store.â Notice âheâ and âIâ are in the group with âwe.â âWe went to the storeâ is of course also correct. Another example: âDave went to the store with him [not he].â âDave went to the store with me [not I].â Therefore, âDave went to the store with him and meâ is correct. I realize for some of you that last sentence might sound completely wrong and ungrammatical. Between you and me, I think itâs time to change that perception. Thereâs a little quiz you can take at UsingEnglish.com: Quiz: Subject and Object Pronouns. For more on this topic, see the article The English Personal Pronoun System.
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