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Is it ‘taller than I’ or ‘taller than me’?

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people on stilts and dressed in colourful outfits and bright-coloured wigs tower above
people on stilts and dressed in colourful outfits and bright-coloured wigs tower above

The question of whether to use ‘I’ or ‘me’ย in sentences such as โ€˜Doris and I went to the operaโ€™ is one we’ve covered on the site before. But it turns out the I-or-me question doesnโ€™t end there, as another recent posting on our ย writing advice forum ย proves. When making comparisons, is it correct grammar to write โ€˜than Iโ€™ or โ€˜than meโ€™?

As our reader points out, strict adherence to the rules of grammar would seem to call for the subject pronoun (eg I, he, she). But is it acceptable in modern, casual contexts to use the object pronoun (eg me, him, her)?
 

Subject/object

Letโ€™s recap. The subject in a sentence is either the person or thing performing the action (the verb) of the sentence, or it is the topic (or theme) of the sentence. For example:

She went to the opera.

The opera was a little dull.

The object is the person or thing affected by the verb in the sentence, or that follows a preposition (a word that shows how different parts of the sentence are related in space and time eg as, by, before, to, among etc). For example:

I actually enjoyed the opera.

They presented an award to him.
 

โ€˜Thanโ€™ as conjunction

Following โ€˜thanโ€™ with the subject pronoun in sentences such as โ€˜He is taller than Iโ€™ is strictly accurate because the comparison is between two subjects. Both โ€˜heโ€™ and โ€˜Iโ€™ can be viewed as the subject: the verb of the sentence (โ€˜isโ€™, from โ€˜to beโ€™) obviously applies to โ€˜heโ€™, but is also implied for โ€˜Iโ€™ (โ€˜He is taller than I amโ€™). In this use, the word โ€˜thanโ€™ is working as a conjunction โ€“ a word that joins two words, sentences or clauses together. More specifically, it is a subordinating conjunction: it introduces a dependent clause (โ€˜I amโ€™).
 

โ€˜Thanโ€™ as preposition

However, there are those who argue that โ€˜thanโ€™ functions here as a preposition. Accordingly, just as other prepositions, such as โ€˜byโ€™, โ€˜beforeโ€™, โ€˜toโ€™, are followed by pronouns in the object case (โ€˜by meโ€™, โ€˜before herโ€™, โ€˜to himโ€™), so too should โ€˜thanโ€™ be. Itโ€™s also worth noting that using the object (โ€˜than meโ€™) will sound more natural to most ears. And itโ€™s not even a modern habit โ€“ or one without impressive defenders: both Lord Byron and Shakespeare treated โ€˜thanโ€™ in this way.
 

Ambiguity

One additional point in favour of using the subject pronoun is that itโ€™s possible to be more precise. Consider these sentences:

  • He has more clients than I. [He has more clients than I have.]
  • He has more clients than me. [I am not his only client.]

 

Context and audience

Evidently, the answer to the I-or-me dilemma is not clear cut. So, as with so many issues in writing, the best thing to do is consider your audience and the context in which youโ€™re writing. In formal situations, it would be best to stick with the subject pronoun. Otherwise, you may need to be prepared to fight your corner.


Our free 64-page guide to better professional writing, The Write Stuff, is an ideal companion if you write emails, reports, bids or any other business document. Click here to get download your free copy.

 

Image credit: David Tadevosian / Shutterstock

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Catie Holdridge headshot

Catie joined Emphasis with an English literature and creative writing degree and a keen interest in what makes language work. Having researched, written, commissioned and edited dozens of articles for the Emphasis blog, she now knows more about the intricacies of effective professional writing than she ever thought possible.

She produced and co-wrote our online training programme,ย The Complete Business Writer, and these days oversees all the Emphasis marketing efforts. And she keeps office repartee at a suitably literary level.

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