Functions I can appear as a
subject,
object,
determiner, or
predicative complement. The reflexive form also appears as an
adjunct.
Me occasionally appears as a
modifier in a noun phrase. • Subject: ''I'm here; me being here
; my being there
; I paid for myself to be here.'' • Object:
She saw me;
She introduced him to me; He gave me the book; I saw myself in the mirror; It was a picture of me. • Predicative complement:
The only person there was me /
I; I made her mine. • Determiner:
I met my friend. • Adjunct:
I fixed the problem myself. • Modifier:
the me generation Coordinative constructions The above applies when the pronoun stands alone as the subject or object. In some varieties of English (particularly in formal
registers), those rules also apply in coordinative constructions such as "you and I". • "My husband and I wish you a merry Christmas." • "Between you and me..." In many dialects of informal English, the accusative is sometimes used when the pronoun is part of a coordinative
subject construction, as in • "Phil and me wish you a merry Christmas." This is stigmatized but common in many dialects.
Dependents Pronouns rarely take
dependents, but it is possible for
me to have many of the same kind of dependents as other
noun phrases. •
Relative clause modifier: ''the me I'd like to be
; *me I'd like to be'' • Determiner: ''the me I'd like to be
; *the me'' •
Adjective phrase modifier:
the real me •
Adverb phrase external modifier:
Not even me == Semantics ==