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tallulah71 Wrote:

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> People who say "I" instead of "me".

>

> E.G,

>

> "That ice-cream's for her and I".....Take out the

> 'Her' and you're saying, "it's for I".

> Should be, "her and me".

>

> "This area really suits Simon and I".....no it

> doesn't, it suits "Simon and me".

>

>

> "This has been a real learning curve for Gill and

> I, because...." GILL AND ME!

>

> (All real statements)

>

> "He and I love these kids" - OK. take out "He" and

> I still love the kids!

>

> SIMPLES



it's grammatically correct to say 'I' in all those cases

katie1997 Wrote:

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> Actually, yes, I do.

>

> As is evident by blah blah ad nauseum etc etc.


I disagree with the points you're making there katie1997. You're simply unable to understand the concept I'm trying to explain.

I meant it as in burke but without the 'r' sound (hard to spell if you think about it)- Same goes for cook, look etc.


I have no problem with 'luke' or any other genuinely accent/region derived pron. but when people pronounce it as though they were 5 years old and fail to rhyme book with rook (I know, that doesn't really help)it grates.


If this thread had said 'tiny little things that cause you rational rage' I would go further. But it doesn't. So I won't.

tallulah71 Wrote:

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> Rosie H...No, it isn't.


tallulah, it is you know: I = subject, me = object


I assume you meant "Rose21...No, it isn't"? If you're going to get all bloody nora about it, at least direct your ire not at the person who's agreeing with you.

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