tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5469303850160738825.post4278692662255297098..comments2023-03-16T00:19:35.389-07:00Comments on Vintage One: 20 years of Mtn Bike passion and counting.: Me and Rebecca.grannygearhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06896238587895388993noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5469303850160738825.post-78159242454623963662010-07-14T12:51:03.411-07:002010-07-14T12:51:03.411-07:00Hey! Thanks David! Excellent comment. I actuall...Hey! Thanks David! Excellent comment. I actually like the Cookie Monster approach and I am especially fond of Yoda speak.<br /><br />Thanking you, I am...hmmm???<br /><br />grannygeargrannygearhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06896238587895388993noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5469303850160738825.post-5798952935501972592010-07-14T10:37:17.941-07:002010-07-14T10:37:17.941-07:00Grannygear,
To put your mind at ease, "Me a...Grannygear,<br /><br /> To put your mind at ease, "Me and Rebecca" is well and good for the title of a blog post. "Rebecca and I" would be appropriate as well. Trust your writer's ear. <br /><br /> Its use in a sentence is where it matters. It is proper to use "me and Rebecca" as the object in a sentence. For instance, "The camera man filmed me and Rebecca." <br /> When used as the subject things change. "Rebecca and I rode the single track."<br /> A simple key is to break your phrase down to its individual parts, "Rebecca" and "Me", and make sure each agrees with the verb individually. So in my first sentence "filmed me" and "filmed Rebecca" sound reasonable and agree with the verb. "Filmed I" just wouldn't be right.<br /> In the second sentence you have "Rebecca rode" and "I rode". Sounds right. You wouldn't want to say "me rode", unless you were Tarzan or the Cookie Monster. <br /> <br />David <br /><br />p.s. Keep up the good work. Me enjoy your blog. ;)Davidnoreply@blogger.com