Food & Drink1 min ago
Yourself, Myself!
I know there are are more important issues but... is it only me that gets really irritated by the apparently increasing and incorrect use of "yourself", "myself" and "ourselves" in place of "you", "me" and "us"?
Someone actually said to me the other day "If yourselves could give ourselves a call.." when he should have said "If you could give us a call ...".
Another favourite is "Please contact Fred or myself for further information". It should be "me"!
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by DavidUK. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My thoughts: I think most languages have an equivalent to the word 'myself' ,which should beused as an emphasis word, like in 'me, myself''or 'you yourself know that.... Alternatively 'I'll go myself' emphasises who will go as does the order 'you go yourself'.
'Yourselves' 'ourselves' - these are old-fashioned and formal but grammatically correct when you are speaking about a firm, (i.e. a body of people) contacting another firm or company, to denote that we are speaking beyond the personal, that it is a company matter. 'Give us a call' is in modern common usage about your company when you are speaking on their behalf, I myself agree! (People used to say 'your goodselves' to a valued customer. Imagine that')
jno has a good point about the 'myself' covering the uncertainty of whether to use 'I' or 'me' the correct usage being easily determined by putting the clause 'fred or' aside and then it would read 'contact me'. Equally 'Fred or I should be contacted' - put aside 'Fred or' and then we have 'I should be contacted'
At this hour of the morning I cannot remember the grammatical rules about 'us' but something nags away. A sentence mustn't end in it, perhaps? We need Peter the Pedant to post on this one.
jenstar, I think 'yourselves' is usually the object of a sentence - after the verb, and meaning the person the action is done to - 'you've hurt yourselves'. (Also, it's mostly used when the person doing the action is that same as the person it's done to: I've hurt you but You've hurt yourselves.) It isn't usually the subject, coming before the verb and meaning the person who does the action: 'Yourselves can go now'. This would normally just be 'You can go now'. And 'If yourselves could give ourselves a call' would normally just be 'Call us'.
As to why those words were spoken... well, sometimes people need to think about things they've been told at their own pace, so they use longer words in response, in order to give themselves a bit more time; and it can become a habit even when they're not thinking at great length about a particular conversation.
It is, perhaps, something to do with the modern lazy way of speaking and the inability to apply grammar to a sentence.
When unsure whether to say 'you and I' or 'you and me' there is a tendency to say ****** and myself.
I was always taught to split the phrase or sentence up to highlight the correct usage. For example 'Jane and I went to the cinema'. Jane went to the cinema and I went to the cinema. (you wouldn't say 'me went to the cinema' or 'myself went to the cinema').
Or, 'It's a good thing for Johnny and me that the bus was late or we would not have caught it'. It was a good thing for Johnny and it was a good thing for me that the bus was late.
Sorry if I went on a little.