Me


When you're speaking:

I'm not as pretty as
her.
She's older than
him.
It's
them.
Tanya and me are off to Acapulco, or Me and Tanya are off to Acapulco.

In very formal or old-fahioned writing you may see
I, she, he, we and they used instead:
None was as rich as he.
You may also hear this in spoken English, but it often sounds much too formal or pompous:
It was they.
My husband and I are going to the opera.

You can avoid using either by rephrasing your sentence:
No-one was as rich as he was.
They were the ones.
I am going to the opera with my husband.

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