Yoong Liat wrote: |
|
If you use a personal pronoun on its own after than, it must be an object pronoun such as 'me' or 'him.' It used to considered correct to use a subject pronoun such as 'I' or 'he', but this now sounds very old-fashoined.
|
|
Actually, a professor of mine (he teaches Transports, not English, but he's a typical British gentleman!) speaks this way, and I'm so used to it that I've picked it up. Rather than 'old-fashioned,' I'd say it's quite formal, but in some contexts I guess it might be the best choice.
Here's what the BBC Learning English say:
My brother is taller than me.
This sentence sounds very natural but again it is not strictly grammatically correct. The 'correct' form is 'My brother is taller than I'. This is because this sentence is actually a shortened form of 'My brother is taller than I am'. Using the correct form can sound very formal and might not be suitable depending on to whom you were talking (or would you say 'who you were talking to'?)
Ah, and finally ... "It used to considered correct to use a subject pronoun" ==> "It was considered correct", you meant? or "It was used to being ..."?