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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Me, myself and I

Is "Me too.", grammatically speaking, accepted in English?
Or would it only be viable when it is a response to a statement like this.
"It would be me that wants an iceblock."
As opposed to...
"I want an iceblock" where the answer should be, as far as I'm concerned, "I do too."
  

Top answer

Hi, It's very, very widely accepted as a feature of casual English. If someone says 'I want a Coke' , and you answer ' Me, too' , no-one is going to think your English is poor. Clive

  • Hi, It's very, very widely accepted as a feature of casual English.
  • If someone says 'I want a Coke' , and you answer ' Me, too' , no-one is going to think your English is poor.
  • Clive
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5 Answers
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Hi,

It's very, very widely accepted as a feature of casual English.

If someone says 'I want a Coke', and you answer 'Me, too', no-one is going to think your English is poor.

Clive
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For a response to an affirmative, you can say:

Me too. / I do too.

For a response to a negative, you can say:

Me neither. / I don't either.

All are grammatically correct.

CJ
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What is an iceblock?
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A block of ice, one would suppose! Emotion: rofl

I know. Next question. Why would anyone want one?
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"Do igloos have doors?"

Yes, they have iceblock doors. Emotion: wink

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