by Amy Keuper, VP Sales
Co
mmunicating
well is foundational to success. In sales, you can quickly lose your credibility
with the use
of a grammatically incorrect word or phrase. Even so, using proper
grammar isn’t typically a conscious pursuit. On one particular point, however, people are sipping with their pinky
fingers raised, verbally speaking. They are striving for correctness but
getting it wrong.
Not one
lesson in all of history seems to have stuck in the minds of American children
more than the English teacher’s maxim—misunderstood and boiled down to this
principle: that using “I” is proper in every sentence, no matter what. I am
hearing “I” misused on a regular basis—on the news, in conversation, and on TV
shows. The English teacher in me would like to set things straight.
First of
all, rest assured—you aren’t as wrong as you fear. Only my children and the veritable Country
Bumpkin are in danger of regularly using “me” incorrectly as a subject: “Me and Billy are going fishing.” One easy way to check what is correct is to
say what you naturally would say if you were referring to yourself alone: “I am
going fishing.” This is it folks—what
your English teacher was preaching. Don’t say, “Me want ice cream.”
The
confusion comes when the subject is at the end of the sentence, usually in a
comparison. You can test what is right
by finishing the sentence and repeating the verb.
Wrong:
“Stacy has brown hair like me.”
Correct:
“Stacy has brown hair like I have.”
Wrong:
“Their family celebrates different holidays than us.”
Correct:
“Their family celebrates different holidays than we [celebrate].”
Wrong: “I
am taller than him.”
Correct: “I
am taller than he [is tall].”
What your
teacher wasn’t saying is that “I” is always right. As an object, “me” is
correct. Even with another person’s name included, “me” is proper.
Examples,
all correct:
“If you
have any questions about tonight’s program, see me afterward.”
“If you
have any questions about tonight’s program, see
“If you
have any questions about tonight’s program, see Gary or me afterward.”
The rule is
that when you are the subject of the sentence, “I” is the way to go. “He,” “She” and I are pronoun subjects—the
being or doer unnamed.
Example:
“I was born
on September 1st.”
“He was
born on September 1st.”
“He and I
were both born on September 1st.”
When you
are the object, “me” really is okay! “Him,”
“her” and “me” are simply pronouns used as objects—something is done to, for,
or with, etc. this person.
Example:
“Mom hugged
me.”
“Mom hugged
Ashley.”
“Mom hugged
Ashley and me.”
“Mom hugged
her and me.”
I hope this is helpful. If you have any comments about this blog entry, email I and me will respond.
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