She is rich as well as I

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ademoglu

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Hi,

*self-made*

- She is rich as well as I.

I would like to ask if we can use "as well as I" instead of "me"?

Thanks.
 
No.

She is as rich as I (strictly grammatical).
She is as rich as me (common).
She is as rich as I am (the safest choice).
 
'She, as well as I, is rich.'
I think it is uncommon, yet it might be the OP's intended meaning, but I am not a teacher.
 
That would be highly unusual.
 
You can have: She and I are rich. or Both she and I are rich.
 
Those are good.
 
I think 'She is rich, as am I' might also be the OP's intended meaning, but I am not a teacher.
 
That would also be unusual.
 
No.

She is as rich as I (strictly grammatical).
She is as rich as me (common).
She is as rich as I am (the safest choice).

Hi Mike.

Is the first "as" an adverb and the second one a preposition in your example sentences?
 
It should be a conjunction, but it is used as a preposition in #2.
 
So many thanks for the answers.

What about this one:

- She is rich as well as I AM.

Thanks.
 
I consider it wrong, but I am not a teacher.
 
OK...I think only "me" is OK as in "She's rich as well as ME."
 
I would advise you to forget about 'as well as' in such a sentence, but I am not a teacher.
 
IMO, in most cases, it is better to use "and" instead of "as well as".
 
That's a comma splice. Change the comma to a semicolon.
 
***** NOT A TEACHER *****

Hello, Ademoglu:

You may have already read this on the Web, but just in case ...

1. "He is rich as well as me."

2. "He, as well as I/me, is rich."

That source claims that #1 is correct and that #2 is incorrect. I shall keep my opinion to myself.

To read the whole article: On Google, type in AS WELL AS -- ENGLISH GRAMMAR perfectyourenglish.com
 
I don't find #1 to be correct.
 
Different strokes. I prefer the much simpler "She and I are both rich."
 
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