Me, as direct or indirect object the speaker as the object of a verb or preposition, when the speaker is also the subject.
"The Lord said unto Moses, Take off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground; and I will be with thee in all thy ways. (Note: In this specific theological context, 'myself' would replace 'I' to denote divine self-reference). Wait, that doesn't work well as a natural sentence. Let me try again strictly adhering to the prompt's constraint about the specific meaning of "Alternative letter-case form". Actually, re-reading the definition provided in the prompt: "Alternative letter-case form of myself used when speaking as God or another important figure who is understood from context." This implies the sentence needs to show a stylistic choice where 'Myself' (capitalized) or perhaps just the word itself functions uniquely. However, standard English doesn't typically capitalize "myself" except at the start of a sentence. Perhaps the definition refers to archaic forms like "Mysellf"? No, it says "Alternative letter-case form". Let's reconsider the most likely interpretation: The user might be referring to a specific stylistic convention in religious texts or poetry where 'Myself' is capitalized for emphasis when God speaks. But standard usage doesn't support capitalizing pron"
Alternative letter-case form of myself used when speaking as God or another important figure who is understood from context.
Myself comes from Middle English and Old English phrases combining "me" or "my" with "self." The word originally referred to the speaker in a reflexive sense before being reinterpreted as a combination of the possessive pronoun and the noun self.