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myself
[ mahy-self ]
pronoun
I myself will challenge the winner.
- (used reflexively in place of me as the object of a preposition or as the direct or indirect object of a verb):
I gave myself a good rubdown. She asked me for a picture of myself.
My wife and myself fully agree. She wanted John and myself to take charge. The originators of the plan were my partner and myself.
He knows as much about the matter as myself.
- my normal or customary self:
After a few days of rest, I expect to be myself again.
myself
/ maɪˈsɛlf /
pronoun
- the reflexive form of I or me
- (intensifier)
I myself know of no answer
- preceded by a copula my usual self
I'm not myself today
- not_standard.used instead of I or me in compound noun phrases
John and myself are voting together
Usage Note
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
"I feel I was as good, as cooperative, I took their advice, I put myself in their hands, this is alien to me, it's the first time anything like that has ever happened to me in my life."
“I kind of taught myself to get used to it and ignore it, but the week of the election it became utterly impossible to just ignore it.”
It’s what I remind myself of when life gets hard.
“I’m not proud of this, I don’t feel good about myself when I say things like this, but it is a part of who I am: I wanted to see sad Yankee fans,” Schur says after his mirthful recap.
“I have said to myself in the last two to three years, ‘I want to keep working for as long as I physically can because I want to know what it’s like to try to be funny at every age,’” he says.
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