English, asked by RasikaM, 6 hours ago

What is I, me, myself!?​

Answers

Answered by shaiksubhanuddin123
1

Answer:

Myself is used as the reflexive objective pronoun when you are both the subject and the object of the sentence: “I (subject) wrote (verb) myself (reflexive objective pronoun) a note.” To sum up: Subjective pronoun: I (Sophie and I went for a walk)

When choosing whether to use I, me, or myself, you need to know if you need a subjective (I), objective (me), or reflexive pronoun (myself). Remember that the subject of the sentence does the action (expressed by the verb) that involves the object. For example, "I (subject) went (verb) for a walk with Sophie (object)." It's also possible to have compound subjects and objects, which means that there is more than one subject or object. For example, “Sophie and I (compound subject) went for a walk”. Since “Sophie and I” is a compound subject, I is the correct pronoun because I is the subjective pronoun.

Now for objective pronouns: In the case of, “Sophie went with I/me/myself for a walk”, the correct form is me, because the subject (Sophie) does the verb (went) involving the object (me). In the case of a compound object, the same rule is true: Sophie (subject) went with Alice and me (compound object) for a walk.

Reflexive pronouns are "words ending in -self or -selves that are used when the subject and the object of a sentence are the same (e.g., I believe in myself). They can act as either objects or indirect objects" (Traffis, n.d., para. 1). Myself is used as the reflexive objective pronoun when you are both the subject and the object of the sentence: “I (subject) wrote (verb) myself (reflexive objective pronoun) a note.”

To sum up:

Subjective pronoun: I (Sophie and I went for a walk)

Objective pronoun: Me (Sophie went with me for a walk)

Reflexive pronoun: Myself (I wrote myself a note)

Answered by Anonymous
3

They are pronouns. That's it.

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