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āIām not speaking to the Queen. Casual conversation allows the use of āmeā at the end of a sentence in that context. No wonder you donāt have an on-screen job any moreā.
After than, you can use either me or I. This has been a debate for years between prepositionists and conjonctionists.
To avoid confusion, Bill could have expanded the sentence into āthan I haveā (which would have meant the subject pronoun), but since he didnāt, both are indeed grammatically correct.
Templo S.U.D. almost 10 years ago
Sure heās British, but could Stephen Hawking make a good CIA chief? Iām sure he has more intelligence than Jason.
Arbitrary almost 10 years ago
āIām not speaking to the Queen. Casual conversation allows the use of āmeā at the end of a sentence in that context. No wonder you donāt have an on-screen job any moreā.
groovebilledani almost 10 years ago
It warms my heart to see someone who understands the correct use of pronouns! That basic English grammar seems to be getting lostā¦.
maxpat almost 10 years ago
Actually, both Jason and his mom are correct.
After than, you can use either me or I. This has been a debate for years between prepositionists and conjonctionists.
To avoid confusion, Bill could have expanded the sentence into āthan I haveā (which would have meant the subject pronoun), but since he didnāt, both are indeed grammatically correct.
Burgundy2 almost 10 years ago
It seems to me that āno oneā is the subject of the sentence, therefore Jasonās use of āmeā is correct.