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ME

Me is the object pronoun of the first-person singular in English. It appears as the direct object or indirect object of a verb, or as the object of a preposition. The corresponding subject pronoun is I.

Etymology: from Old English mē, the accusative/dative singular form of the first-person pronoun, from Proto-Germanic *mē.

Usage notes: In standard English, me is used in object position: She spoke to me. In informal

In addition to its grammatical use, “me” also appears in many idioms and fixed phrases (for example,

It
has
cognates
in
other
Germanic
languages,
such
as
Dutch
me
and
German
mir.
speech,
people
sometimes
say
“It
was
me”
instead
of
“It
was
I,”
though
prescriptive
usage
prefers
“It
was
I”
in
formal
writing.
When
two
pronouns
appear
as
the
subject,
the
proper
form
is
“John
and
I
went,”
not
“Me
and
John
went.”
The
phrase
“Let
me”
is
a
common
imperative
or
hortatory
expression
meaning
“allow
me
to
…”.
“just
between
you
and
me,”
“beat
me
to
it”),
underscoring
its
role
as
a
core
pronoun
in
modern
English.