The word 'yourself' is a second person pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun (name) for a person spoken to.
A third person pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun for a person or thing spoken about.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a word used to 'reflect' back to its antecedent.
The third person reflexive pronouns are: himself, herself, itself, themselves.
Examples:
You should make yourself something to eat. (second person, the one spoken to)
Jane made herself a new dress. (third person, the one spoken about)
The cat jumped when it saw itself in the mirror. (third person, the one spoken about)
The children enjoyed themselves at the picnic. (third person, the ones spoken about)
To put the word 'yourself' in third person, you would say 'himself' or 'herself' depending on the gender of the individual you are referring to.
You use the pronouns "he" or "she" instead of saying "I."
The novel was written with a third person omniscient narrator.
Yes, the word "ponesse" is Italian.Specifically, it is the third person singular form of the imperfect subjunctive of the verb "porre" ("to put, to lay down"). The translation is "(that he/she/it/You) did put." The pronunciation is "poh-NEHS-seh."
In the sentence, "People have said it's massive.", both the noun 'people' and the pronoun 'it' are both in the third person, the person or thing spoken about.The word 'massive' is an adjective, a predicate adjective that restates the subject 'it'.
The verb put is plural, and the third person singular is puts (he, she it puts).
yes
No, the personal pronoun 'they' is the third person(subjective); a word that takes the place of the people or things spoken about: They are the ones I told you about.The first person pronouns take the place of a noun for the person speaking (I, me, we, us).
Bury is the right word for it. Buried id the second & third form for bury. e.g. When he died, his kins buried him. Or grave. The thing the person is buried in.
If you always put yourself in the other person's situation you can almost always catch yourself before you do something that you'll regret.
Putting on a brave front while shaking like jello on the inside.
Sympathy
tou must have confidence in yourself !
The pronoun 'their' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to show that noun belongs to a third person, plural antecedent. Example:The Lincolns put a new roof on their house.