<p>Please help me guys, i am confused.</p>
<p>1) Like me, they are ( why is me correct shouldnot be i)
2) my classmates, similar to me, find ( is me correct or it should be similar to i?)</p>
<p>Please help me guys, i am confused.</p>
<p>1) Like me, they are ( why is me correct shouldnot be i)
2) my classmates, similar to me, find ( is me correct or it should be similar to i?)</p>
<p>1) The pronoun is an object. They are like me/him/her</p>
<p>2) The pronoun is an object</p>
<p>If you want a non-rigorous way of remembering it, whenever “him” or “her” sounds better, use “me.” If he/she sounds better, use “I.”</p>
<p>I am confused. I thought the pronoun must have the same subject or object case as the noun it modifies, am i wrong?</p>
<p>‘They’ is the subject.</p>
<p>Can you tell me why it shouldnot be " like i, they are" what is the grammatical rule here?</p>
<p>I think you are getting confused because the sentences are inverted.</p>
<p>1) **Like me, they are fat. ** Let’s reverse this and say: They are fat like me</p>
<p>We can see that THEY is the subject, and ME is the object. When the pronoun is the subject you use me/him/her</p>
<p>My CLASSMATES are similar to ME. Classmates it the subject, and the pronoun is the object, so we use “me”</p>
<p>Example.
I am going to give this to her. I is the SUBJECT, HER is the OBJECT. When the pronoun is the subject, use I, he, she, etc.</p>
<p>Ohh thanks guys i understood, like is a preposition that is why it must come after it object case pronoun? The same case with similar to, After “to” a pronoun must be object case, am i correct now</p>