“I teach myself”Standardization authority“I reminded myself that…”“I find myself” usageReflexive pronoun (myself) grammar issueRemember myself doing something“I was beside myself”when to use “myself” and “by myself”How do you call..? vs. What do you call…?To Myself vs for myselfNegative questions: “No, I don’t” or “Yes, I don't”?

Can I create an upright 7-foot × 5-foot wall with the Minor Illusion spell?

Should my PhD thesis be submitted under my legal name?

How to deal with or prevent idle in the test team?

What if somebody invests in my application?

Why isn't KTEX's runway designation 10/28 instead of 9/27?

Can a Gentile theist be saved?

Perfect riffle shuffles

Is exact Kanji stroke length important?

What does the "3am" section means in manpages?

The One-Electron Universe postulate is true - what simple change can I make to change the whole universe?

What is Sitecore Managed Cloud?

Have I saved too much for retirement so far?

Freedom of speech and where it applies

Can somebody explain Brexit in a few child-proof sentences?

Is it okay / does it make sense for another player to join a running game of Munchkin?

Superhero words!

Word describing multiple paths to the same abstract outcome

Why are all the doors on Ferenginar (the Ferengi home world) far shorter than the average Ferengi?

How to prevent YouTube from showing already watched videos?

Calculating the number of days between 2 dates in Excel

Identify a stage play about a VR experience in which participants are encouraged to simulate performing horrific activities

Books on the History of math research at European universities

node command while defining a coordinate in TikZ

Reply ‘no position’ while the job posting is still there (‘HiWi’ position in Germany)



“I teach myself”


Standardization authority“I reminded myself that…”“I find myself” usageReflexive pronoun (myself) grammar issueRemember myself doing something“I was beside myself”when to use “myself” and “by myself”How do you call..? vs. What do you call…?To Myself vs for myselfNegative questions: “No, I don’t” or “Yes, I don't”?













1















Is it grammatically correct to say “I teach myself subject”?



Context: my girlfriend is Italian, and remarked that “I teach myself” has no meaningful equivalent in Italian — ordinarily they would use “to learn” to say “I’m learning”, where the learning is happening under one’s own effort, and not being taught by a second party. In English, I’d often say “I teach myself”.



She asked whether I’d use “I teach myself” in formal English and I genuinely don’t know. Is this considered grammatically correct?










share|improve this question






















  • Normally you would say "I taught myself chess", if you did this in the past, or "I am teaching myself chess", if you are still learning. "I teach myself" would be more rarely used, but would be appropriate if someone asked "How do you learn these things?" "I teach myself."

    – Hot Licks
    4 hours ago











  • I’m learning on my own.

    – Jim
    4 hours ago











  • Wait, Isn’t that a song by the Divinyls? Oh, no. Close though :-)

    – Jim
    4 hours ago
















1















Is it grammatically correct to say “I teach myself subject”?



Context: my girlfriend is Italian, and remarked that “I teach myself” has no meaningful equivalent in Italian — ordinarily they would use “to learn” to say “I’m learning”, where the learning is happening under one’s own effort, and not being taught by a second party. In English, I’d often say “I teach myself”.



She asked whether I’d use “I teach myself” in formal English and I genuinely don’t know. Is this considered grammatically correct?










share|improve this question






















  • Normally you would say "I taught myself chess", if you did this in the past, or "I am teaching myself chess", if you are still learning. "I teach myself" would be more rarely used, but would be appropriate if someone asked "How do you learn these things?" "I teach myself."

    – Hot Licks
    4 hours ago











  • I’m learning on my own.

    – Jim
    4 hours ago











  • Wait, Isn’t that a song by the Divinyls? Oh, no. Close though :-)

    – Jim
    4 hours ago














1












1








1








Is it grammatically correct to say “I teach myself subject”?



Context: my girlfriend is Italian, and remarked that “I teach myself” has no meaningful equivalent in Italian — ordinarily they would use “to learn” to say “I’m learning”, where the learning is happening under one’s own effort, and not being taught by a second party. In English, I’d often say “I teach myself”.



She asked whether I’d use “I teach myself” in formal English and I genuinely don’t know. Is this considered grammatically correct?










share|improve this question














Is it grammatically correct to say “I teach myself subject”?



Context: my girlfriend is Italian, and remarked that “I teach myself” has no meaningful equivalent in Italian — ordinarily they would use “to learn” to say “I’m learning”, where the learning is happening under one’s own effort, and not being taught by a second party. In English, I’d often say “I teach myself”.



She asked whether I’d use “I teach myself” in formal English and I genuinely don’t know. Is this considered grammatically correct?







grammar word-usage grammaticality expressions verbs






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 5 hours ago









probablytomprobablytom

38113




38113












  • Normally you would say "I taught myself chess", if you did this in the past, or "I am teaching myself chess", if you are still learning. "I teach myself" would be more rarely used, but would be appropriate if someone asked "How do you learn these things?" "I teach myself."

    – Hot Licks
    4 hours ago











  • I’m learning on my own.

    – Jim
    4 hours ago











  • Wait, Isn’t that a song by the Divinyls? Oh, no. Close though :-)

    – Jim
    4 hours ago


















  • Normally you would say "I taught myself chess", if you did this in the past, or "I am teaching myself chess", if you are still learning. "I teach myself" would be more rarely used, but would be appropriate if someone asked "How do you learn these things?" "I teach myself."

    – Hot Licks
    4 hours ago











  • I’m learning on my own.

    – Jim
    4 hours ago











  • Wait, Isn’t that a song by the Divinyls? Oh, no. Close though :-)

    – Jim
    4 hours ago

















Normally you would say "I taught myself chess", if you did this in the past, or "I am teaching myself chess", if you are still learning. "I teach myself" would be more rarely used, but would be appropriate if someone asked "How do you learn these things?" "I teach myself."

– Hot Licks
4 hours ago





Normally you would say "I taught myself chess", if you did this in the past, or "I am teaching myself chess", if you are still learning. "I teach myself" would be more rarely used, but would be appropriate if someone asked "How do you learn these things?" "I teach myself."

– Hot Licks
4 hours ago













I’m learning on my own.

– Jim
4 hours ago





I’m learning on my own.

– Jim
4 hours ago













Wait, Isn’t that a song by the Divinyls? Oh, no. Close though :-)

– Jim
4 hours ago






Wait, Isn’t that a song by the Divinyls? Oh, no. Close though :-)

– Jim
4 hours ago











3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















0














It's fine.



Lots of verbs in English take a reflexive pronoun like "myself." To teach is one of them. In the case of to teach, it takes two objects: one is the person being taught, and the other is the subject or skill being taught (see Oxford Dictionaries entry "teach" subdefinition 1.1 for the double object use). The reflexive reflects the possibility of someone (like "Lisa") teaching herself something through practice, reading, and other resources.



FluentU, a blog on English language usage, highlights the use of the verb to teach with the reflexive pronoun. It focuses on the present progressive form of the verb:



I am teaching myself. 

You are teaching yourself.

Lisa is teaching herself. / She is teaching herself.
Frank is teaching himself. / He is teaching himself.

We are teaching ourselves.

You are teaching yourselves.

They are teaching themselves.


Why the progressive? This is because teaching tends to be a repetitive action over a period of time, which the progressive or continuous aspect expresses. So "I'm teaching myself (subject)" would be totally fine too.



Still, the simple present also expresses a general habit and can be used. In this sense,




I teach myself (subject)




is understood fine in many contexts. In fact, "I teach myself" is twice as common in a Google Books search than "I'm teaching myself" or "I am teaching myself." General Google results replicate the pattern. I suggest consulting the book results or more general web results to see how the expressions are used in context.






share|improve this answer






























    0














    It is formally correct grammar, following only accepted rules of standard English. However it is not idiomatic; the circumstances would have to be very particular to say that.



    The more idiomatic/natural way of saying what you mean by 'I teach myself' is:




    I am teaching myself X.




    The present simple 'I teach' is just not that common as is in English, whereas the present progressive is so much more common.



    As to the choice of 'to learn' or 'to teach oneself' (not the issue of grammar but the issue of lexical meaning), you could just as well say 'I am learning' in English also. But the two are synonymous.



    That said, just for fun I checked Google NGrams to see the relative frequency of the three, "am learning", "am teaching myself", and "I teach myself". "Am learning is by far more popular, but it is interesting that "I teach myself" is more common than "am teaching myself". I think this is because, after looking at the examples, "I teach myself" appears (very naturally) in many non-declarative sentences, such as "How do I teach myself", which is a very different context and so sort of doesn't count.



    What this means to me is that "I teach myself" or the more natural "I am teaching myself" might be used, but more likely just say it like in Italian "I am learning".






    share|improve this answer
































      0














      The simple answer is that it is correct. But the real question isn't about English grammar, but about the differences between Italian and English grammar, to see why we would express things differently.



      I can see two reasons you might not be able to say this or why if you did, it might not have the required meaning.



      Firstly, reflexive verbs are much more common in Italian than in English. They are explained here. In addition there is no exact equivalent of "myself", so they would just say mi lavo "I wash me" where we would say "I wash myself" or, more usually, use the verb intransitively: "I wash". Because they are so common, usually corresponding to intransitive verbs in English, or sometimes to a passive construction (mi chiamo "I am called"), you would miss the sense you get in English of emphasising the use of transitive verb, and that you are both the subject and the object. Rather, they are usually used for things you normally do by yourself (mi rado "I shave") without actually thinking about doing something to yourself.



      You will have noticed I have not used the verb "to teach". This is because of the second problem:



      In English, teach can take two objects:




      I teach children chess




      and although one of these is considered an indirect object as shown by the fact that we can say




      I teach chess to the children




      we usually just allow the two objects with no preposition. You can't do this in Italian. You always teach the subject a "to" the people, as shown in Collins Italian Dictionary




      to teach sb sth or teach sth to sb insegnare qc a qn




      This means that you simply cannot teach yourself, unless you are the subject being taught.



      Thus we see that it is quite reasonable to have to express the same thing in different ways in different languages.






      share|improve this answer






















        Your Answer








        StackExchange.ready(function()
        var channelOptions =
        tags: "".split(" "),
        id: "97"
        ;
        initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

        StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
        // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
        if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
        StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
        createEditor();
        );

        else
        createEditor();

        );

        function createEditor()
        StackExchange.prepareEditor(
        heartbeatType: 'answer',
        autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
        convertImagesToLinks: false,
        noModals: true,
        showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
        reputationToPostImages: null,
        bindNavPrevention: true,
        postfix: "",
        imageUploader:
        brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
        contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
        allowUrls: true
        ,
        noCode: true, onDemand: true,
        discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
        ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
        );



        );













        draft saved

        draft discarded


















        StackExchange.ready(
        function ()
        StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f491325%2fi-teach-myself%23new-answer', 'question_page');

        );

        Post as a guest















        Required, but never shown

























        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        0














        It's fine.



        Lots of verbs in English take a reflexive pronoun like "myself." To teach is one of them. In the case of to teach, it takes two objects: one is the person being taught, and the other is the subject or skill being taught (see Oxford Dictionaries entry "teach" subdefinition 1.1 for the double object use). The reflexive reflects the possibility of someone (like "Lisa") teaching herself something through practice, reading, and other resources.



        FluentU, a blog on English language usage, highlights the use of the verb to teach with the reflexive pronoun. It focuses on the present progressive form of the verb:



        I am teaching myself. 

        You are teaching yourself.

        Lisa is teaching herself. / She is teaching herself.
        Frank is teaching himself. / He is teaching himself.

        We are teaching ourselves.

        You are teaching yourselves.

        They are teaching themselves.


        Why the progressive? This is because teaching tends to be a repetitive action over a period of time, which the progressive or continuous aspect expresses. So "I'm teaching myself (subject)" would be totally fine too.



        Still, the simple present also expresses a general habit and can be used. In this sense,




        I teach myself (subject)




        is understood fine in many contexts. In fact, "I teach myself" is twice as common in a Google Books search than "I'm teaching myself" or "I am teaching myself." General Google results replicate the pattern. I suggest consulting the book results or more general web results to see how the expressions are used in context.






        share|improve this answer



























          0














          It's fine.



          Lots of verbs in English take a reflexive pronoun like "myself." To teach is one of them. In the case of to teach, it takes two objects: one is the person being taught, and the other is the subject or skill being taught (see Oxford Dictionaries entry "teach" subdefinition 1.1 for the double object use). The reflexive reflects the possibility of someone (like "Lisa") teaching herself something through practice, reading, and other resources.



          FluentU, a blog on English language usage, highlights the use of the verb to teach with the reflexive pronoun. It focuses on the present progressive form of the verb:



          I am teaching myself. 

          You are teaching yourself.

          Lisa is teaching herself. / She is teaching herself.
          Frank is teaching himself. / He is teaching himself.

          We are teaching ourselves.

          You are teaching yourselves.

          They are teaching themselves.


          Why the progressive? This is because teaching tends to be a repetitive action over a period of time, which the progressive or continuous aspect expresses. So "I'm teaching myself (subject)" would be totally fine too.



          Still, the simple present also expresses a general habit and can be used. In this sense,




          I teach myself (subject)




          is understood fine in many contexts. In fact, "I teach myself" is twice as common in a Google Books search than "I'm teaching myself" or "I am teaching myself." General Google results replicate the pattern. I suggest consulting the book results or more general web results to see how the expressions are used in context.






          share|improve this answer

























            0












            0








            0







            It's fine.



            Lots of verbs in English take a reflexive pronoun like "myself." To teach is one of them. In the case of to teach, it takes two objects: one is the person being taught, and the other is the subject or skill being taught (see Oxford Dictionaries entry "teach" subdefinition 1.1 for the double object use). The reflexive reflects the possibility of someone (like "Lisa") teaching herself something through practice, reading, and other resources.



            FluentU, a blog on English language usage, highlights the use of the verb to teach with the reflexive pronoun. It focuses on the present progressive form of the verb:



            I am teaching myself. 

            You are teaching yourself.

            Lisa is teaching herself. / She is teaching herself.
            Frank is teaching himself. / He is teaching himself.

            We are teaching ourselves.

            You are teaching yourselves.

            They are teaching themselves.


            Why the progressive? This is because teaching tends to be a repetitive action over a period of time, which the progressive or continuous aspect expresses. So "I'm teaching myself (subject)" would be totally fine too.



            Still, the simple present also expresses a general habit and can be used. In this sense,




            I teach myself (subject)




            is understood fine in many contexts. In fact, "I teach myself" is twice as common in a Google Books search than "I'm teaching myself" or "I am teaching myself." General Google results replicate the pattern. I suggest consulting the book results or more general web results to see how the expressions are used in context.






            share|improve this answer













            It's fine.



            Lots of verbs in English take a reflexive pronoun like "myself." To teach is one of them. In the case of to teach, it takes two objects: one is the person being taught, and the other is the subject or skill being taught (see Oxford Dictionaries entry "teach" subdefinition 1.1 for the double object use). The reflexive reflects the possibility of someone (like "Lisa") teaching herself something through practice, reading, and other resources.



            FluentU, a blog on English language usage, highlights the use of the verb to teach with the reflexive pronoun. It focuses on the present progressive form of the verb:



            I am teaching myself. 

            You are teaching yourself.

            Lisa is teaching herself. / She is teaching herself.
            Frank is teaching himself. / He is teaching himself.

            We are teaching ourselves.

            You are teaching yourselves.

            They are teaching themselves.


            Why the progressive? This is because teaching tends to be a repetitive action over a period of time, which the progressive or continuous aspect expresses. So "I'm teaching myself (subject)" would be totally fine too.



            Still, the simple present also expresses a general habit and can be used. In this sense,




            I teach myself (subject)




            is understood fine in many contexts. In fact, "I teach myself" is twice as common in a Google Books search than "I'm teaching myself" or "I am teaching myself." General Google results replicate the pattern. I suggest consulting the book results or more general web results to see how the expressions are used in context.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 3 hours ago









            TaliesinMerlinTaliesinMerlin

            5,9861127




            5,9861127























                0














                It is formally correct grammar, following only accepted rules of standard English. However it is not idiomatic; the circumstances would have to be very particular to say that.



                The more idiomatic/natural way of saying what you mean by 'I teach myself' is:




                I am teaching myself X.




                The present simple 'I teach' is just not that common as is in English, whereas the present progressive is so much more common.



                As to the choice of 'to learn' or 'to teach oneself' (not the issue of grammar but the issue of lexical meaning), you could just as well say 'I am learning' in English also. But the two are synonymous.



                That said, just for fun I checked Google NGrams to see the relative frequency of the three, "am learning", "am teaching myself", and "I teach myself". "Am learning is by far more popular, but it is interesting that "I teach myself" is more common than "am teaching myself". I think this is because, after looking at the examples, "I teach myself" appears (very naturally) in many non-declarative sentences, such as "How do I teach myself", which is a very different context and so sort of doesn't count.



                What this means to me is that "I teach myself" or the more natural "I am teaching myself" might be used, but more likely just say it like in Italian "I am learning".






                share|improve this answer





























                  0














                  It is formally correct grammar, following only accepted rules of standard English. However it is not idiomatic; the circumstances would have to be very particular to say that.



                  The more idiomatic/natural way of saying what you mean by 'I teach myself' is:




                  I am teaching myself X.




                  The present simple 'I teach' is just not that common as is in English, whereas the present progressive is so much more common.



                  As to the choice of 'to learn' or 'to teach oneself' (not the issue of grammar but the issue of lexical meaning), you could just as well say 'I am learning' in English also. But the two are synonymous.



                  That said, just for fun I checked Google NGrams to see the relative frequency of the three, "am learning", "am teaching myself", and "I teach myself". "Am learning is by far more popular, but it is interesting that "I teach myself" is more common than "am teaching myself". I think this is because, after looking at the examples, "I teach myself" appears (very naturally) in many non-declarative sentences, such as "How do I teach myself", which is a very different context and so sort of doesn't count.



                  What this means to me is that "I teach myself" or the more natural "I am teaching myself" might be used, but more likely just say it like in Italian "I am learning".






                  share|improve this answer



























                    0












                    0








                    0







                    It is formally correct grammar, following only accepted rules of standard English. However it is not idiomatic; the circumstances would have to be very particular to say that.



                    The more idiomatic/natural way of saying what you mean by 'I teach myself' is:




                    I am teaching myself X.




                    The present simple 'I teach' is just not that common as is in English, whereas the present progressive is so much more common.



                    As to the choice of 'to learn' or 'to teach oneself' (not the issue of grammar but the issue of lexical meaning), you could just as well say 'I am learning' in English also. But the two are synonymous.



                    That said, just for fun I checked Google NGrams to see the relative frequency of the three, "am learning", "am teaching myself", and "I teach myself". "Am learning is by far more popular, but it is interesting that "I teach myself" is more common than "am teaching myself". I think this is because, after looking at the examples, "I teach myself" appears (very naturally) in many non-declarative sentences, such as "How do I teach myself", which is a very different context and so sort of doesn't count.



                    What this means to me is that "I teach myself" or the more natural "I am teaching myself" might be used, but more likely just say it like in Italian "I am learning".






                    share|improve this answer















                    It is formally correct grammar, following only accepted rules of standard English. However it is not idiomatic; the circumstances would have to be very particular to say that.



                    The more idiomatic/natural way of saying what you mean by 'I teach myself' is:




                    I am teaching myself X.




                    The present simple 'I teach' is just not that common as is in English, whereas the present progressive is so much more common.



                    As to the choice of 'to learn' or 'to teach oneself' (not the issue of grammar but the issue of lexical meaning), you could just as well say 'I am learning' in English also. But the two are synonymous.



                    That said, just for fun I checked Google NGrams to see the relative frequency of the three, "am learning", "am teaching myself", and "I teach myself". "Am learning is by far more popular, but it is interesting that "I teach myself" is more common than "am teaching myself". I think this is because, after looking at the examples, "I teach myself" appears (very naturally) in many non-declarative sentences, such as "How do I teach myself", which is a very different context and so sort of doesn't count.



                    What this means to me is that "I teach myself" or the more natural "I am teaching myself" might be used, but more likely just say it like in Italian "I am learning".







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 3 hours ago

























                    answered 4 hours ago









                    MitchMitch

                    52.4k15105220




                    52.4k15105220





















                        0














                        The simple answer is that it is correct. But the real question isn't about English grammar, but about the differences between Italian and English grammar, to see why we would express things differently.



                        I can see two reasons you might not be able to say this or why if you did, it might not have the required meaning.



                        Firstly, reflexive verbs are much more common in Italian than in English. They are explained here. In addition there is no exact equivalent of "myself", so they would just say mi lavo "I wash me" where we would say "I wash myself" or, more usually, use the verb intransitively: "I wash". Because they are so common, usually corresponding to intransitive verbs in English, or sometimes to a passive construction (mi chiamo "I am called"), you would miss the sense you get in English of emphasising the use of transitive verb, and that you are both the subject and the object. Rather, they are usually used for things you normally do by yourself (mi rado "I shave") without actually thinking about doing something to yourself.



                        You will have noticed I have not used the verb "to teach". This is because of the second problem:



                        In English, teach can take two objects:




                        I teach children chess




                        and although one of these is considered an indirect object as shown by the fact that we can say




                        I teach chess to the children




                        we usually just allow the two objects with no preposition. You can't do this in Italian. You always teach the subject a "to" the people, as shown in Collins Italian Dictionary




                        to teach sb sth or teach sth to sb insegnare qc a qn




                        This means that you simply cannot teach yourself, unless you are the subject being taught.



                        Thus we see that it is quite reasonable to have to express the same thing in different ways in different languages.






                        share|improve this answer



























                          0














                          The simple answer is that it is correct. But the real question isn't about English grammar, but about the differences between Italian and English grammar, to see why we would express things differently.



                          I can see two reasons you might not be able to say this or why if you did, it might not have the required meaning.



                          Firstly, reflexive verbs are much more common in Italian than in English. They are explained here. In addition there is no exact equivalent of "myself", so they would just say mi lavo "I wash me" where we would say "I wash myself" or, more usually, use the verb intransitively: "I wash". Because they are so common, usually corresponding to intransitive verbs in English, or sometimes to a passive construction (mi chiamo "I am called"), you would miss the sense you get in English of emphasising the use of transitive verb, and that you are both the subject and the object. Rather, they are usually used for things you normally do by yourself (mi rado "I shave") without actually thinking about doing something to yourself.



                          You will have noticed I have not used the verb "to teach". This is because of the second problem:



                          In English, teach can take two objects:




                          I teach children chess




                          and although one of these is considered an indirect object as shown by the fact that we can say




                          I teach chess to the children




                          we usually just allow the two objects with no preposition. You can't do this in Italian. You always teach the subject a "to" the people, as shown in Collins Italian Dictionary




                          to teach sb sth or teach sth to sb insegnare qc a qn




                          This means that you simply cannot teach yourself, unless you are the subject being taught.



                          Thus we see that it is quite reasonable to have to express the same thing in different ways in different languages.






                          share|improve this answer

























                            0












                            0








                            0







                            The simple answer is that it is correct. But the real question isn't about English grammar, but about the differences between Italian and English grammar, to see why we would express things differently.



                            I can see two reasons you might not be able to say this or why if you did, it might not have the required meaning.



                            Firstly, reflexive verbs are much more common in Italian than in English. They are explained here. In addition there is no exact equivalent of "myself", so they would just say mi lavo "I wash me" where we would say "I wash myself" or, more usually, use the verb intransitively: "I wash". Because they are so common, usually corresponding to intransitive verbs in English, or sometimes to a passive construction (mi chiamo "I am called"), you would miss the sense you get in English of emphasising the use of transitive verb, and that you are both the subject and the object. Rather, they are usually used for things you normally do by yourself (mi rado "I shave") without actually thinking about doing something to yourself.



                            You will have noticed I have not used the verb "to teach". This is because of the second problem:



                            In English, teach can take two objects:




                            I teach children chess




                            and although one of these is considered an indirect object as shown by the fact that we can say




                            I teach chess to the children




                            we usually just allow the two objects with no preposition. You can't do this in Italian. You always teach the subject a "to" the people, as shown in Collins Italian Dictionary




                            to teach sb sth or teach sth to sb insegnare qc a qn




                            This means that you simply cannot teach yourself, unless you are the subject being taught.



                            Thus we see that it is quite reasonable to have to express the same thing in different ways in different languages.






                            share|improve this answer













                            The simple answer is that it is correct. But the real question isn't about English grammar, but about the differences between Italian and English grammar, to see why we would express things differently.



                            I can see two reasons you might not be able to say this or why if you did, it might not have the required meaning.



                            Firstly, reflexive verbs are much more common in Italian than in English. They are explained here. In addition there is no exact equivalent of "myself", so they would just say mi lavo "I wash me" where we would say "I wash myself" or, more usually, use the verb intransitively: "I wash". Because they are so common, usually corresponding to intransitive verbs in English, or sometimes to a passive construction (mi chiamo "I am called"), you would miss the sense you get in English of emphasising the use of transitive verb, and that you are both the subject and the object. Rather, they are usually used for things you normally do by yourself (mi rado "I shave") without actually thinking about doing something to yourself.



                            You will have noticed I have not used the verb "to teach". This is because of the second problem:



                            In English, teach can take two objects:




                            I teach children chess




                            and although one of these is considered an indirect object as shown by the fact that we can say




                            I teach chess to the children




                            we usually just allow the two objects with no preposition. You can't do this in Italian. You always teach the subject a "to" the people, as shown in Collins Italian Dictionary




                            to teach sb sth or teach sth to sb insegnare qc a qn




                            This means that you simply cannot teach yourself, unless you are the subject being taught.



                            Thus we see that it is quite reasonable to have to express the same thing in different ways in different languages.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 2 hours ago









                            David RobinsonDavid Robinson

                            2,557216




                            2,557216



























                                draft saved

                                draft discarded
















































                                Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language & Usage Stack Exchange!


                                • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                But avoid


                                • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                                To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                draft saved


                                draft discarded














                                StackExchange.ready(
                                function ()
                                StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f491325%2fi-teach-myself%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                                );

                                Post as a guest















                                Required, but never shown





















































                                Required, but never shown














                                Required, but never shown












                                Required, but never shown







                                Required, but never shown

































                                Required, but never shown














                                Required, but never shown












                                Required, but never shown







                                Required, but never shown







                                Popular posts from this blog

                                How to create a command for the “strange m” symbol in latex? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)How do you make your own symbol when Detexify fails?Writing bold small caps with mathpazo packageplus-minus symbol with parenthesis around the minus signGreek character in Beamer document titleHow to create dashed right arrow over symbol?Currency symbol: Turkish LiraDouble prec as a single symbol?Plus Sign Too Big; How to Call adfbullet?Is there a TeX macro for three-legged pi?How do I get my integral-like symbol to align like the integral?How to selectively substitute a letter with another symbol representing the same letterHow do I generate a less than symbol and vertical bar that are the same height?

                                Българска екзархия Съдържание История | Български екзарси | Вижте също | Външни препратки | Литература | Бележки | НавигацияУстав за управлението на българската екзархия. Цариград, 1870Слово на Ловешкия митрополит Иларион при откриването на Българския народен събор в Цариград на 23. II. 1870 г.Българската правда и гръцката кривда. От С. М. (= Софийски Мелетий). Цариград, 1872Предстоятели на Българската екзархияПодмененият ВеликденИнформационна агенция „Фокус“Димитър Ризов. Българите в техните исторически, етнографически и политически граници (Атлас съдържащ 40 карти). Berlin, Königliche Hoflithographie, Hof-Buch- und -Steindruckerei Wilhelm Greve, 1917Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars

                                Category:Tremithousa Media in category "Tremithousa"Navigation menuUpload media34° 49′ 02.7″ N, 32° 26′ 37.32″ EOpenStreetMapGoogle EarthProximityramaReasonatorScholiaStatisticsWikiShootMe