MYSELF


Meaning of MYSELF in English

transcription, транскрипция: [ mī-ˈself, mə-, Southern also ]

-ˈsef pronoun

Date: before 12th century

1. : that identical one that is I — used reflexively

I'm going to get myself a new suit

for emphasis

I myself will go

or in absolute constructions

myself a tourist, I nevertheless avoided other tourists

2. : my normal, healthy, or sane condition

didn't feel myself yesterday

Usage:

Myself is often used where I or me might be expected: as subject

to wonder what myself will say — Emily Dickinson

others and myself continued to press for the legislation

after as, than, or like

an aversion to paying such people as myself to tutor

was enough to make a better man than myself quail

old-timers like myself

and as object

now here you see myself with the diver

for my wife and myself it was a happy time

Such uses almost always occur when the speaker or writer is referring to himself or herself as an object of discourse rather than as a participant in discourse. The other reflexive personal pronouns are similarly but less frequently used in the same circumstances. Critics have frowned on these uses since about the turn of the century, probably unaware that they serve a definite purpose. Users themselves are as unaware as the critics—they simply follow their instincts. These uses are standard.

Merriam-Webster's Collegiate English vocabulary.      Энциклопедический словарь английского языка Merriam Webster.