BBC Learning English 英语教学



This week's question is a very common question from learners of English. Should I say 'you and me' or 'you and I'?

In this programme Jo Hunter and Feifei Feng from BBC Learning English talk us through the rules. They explain all about personal pronouns.

I, you, he, she, we and they are all personal pronouns. When a personal pronoun is the subject of a sentence they don't change.

- I listen to the radio.

OR

- We play computer games.

The personal pronouns change when they become the object of the sentence.

- He wanted me to check his work.

NOT

- He wanted I to check his work.

 

You and I, or you and me?

So if we're talking about two people - you and I - and they are the subject of the sentence - we would use you and I in English.

- You and I are meeting a colleague tonight.

- He and I are best friends.

However, if those two people become the object of the sentence then 'you and I' changes to 'you and me'.

- He is meeting you and me later.

- He is friends with us.

- He is friends with you and me.

One unfortunate thing you have to be very careful of though, is that native British speakers don't always follow that rule. They might say, "You and me are meeting a colleague tonight" or "Me and him are best friends".

Our advice is to follow the rules but just be aware that native speakers don't always do that!!

Thank you Highsfar for your question. If you have a question please get in touch. You can email us at questions.chinaelt@bbc.co.uk. We'll answer one question every week, so get sending those questions!



Glossary 词汇

rules

规则

personal pronouns

人称代词

subject

主语

sentence

句子

object

宾语

unfortunate

不幸的

native British speakers

英语为母语的英国人

advice

建议,劝告

be aware

注意

人气排行
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