ME
How to Use ME
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishThe word you use for yourself when you're not the subject of the sentence — "I" does the action, "me" receives it.
Many people say "between you and I" or "him and I went" by mistake — after a preposition or as part of an object, it should be "me": "between you and me", "he and I went, but they invited him and me."
Word Forms
me's adjective, mes plural, mes plural
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
Can you pass _____ the salt?
Etymology
From Old English mē, the very old dative form of "I" that eventually took over from the original accusative form too — it goes all the way back to a Proto-Indo-European root shared by Latin mē, Greek emé, and Sanskrit mā.