The word "friends" is not a pronoun: it is a noun. A noun is a word that tells us what a thing, person, place, is called.
Examples: garden, Peter, wife, kitchen.
Some basic pronouns are: I, you,he, she, it, we,they, me, him, her, us,them. They replace nouns when necessary.
Examples:
Peter was working in his garden.
Peter picked some flowers and took the flowers into the house.
Peter arranged the flowers in a vase.
The vase was heavy so he left the vase in the kitchen.
Peter told his wife that Peter had a surprise for his wife.
Now we can replace some nouns with pronouns without losing the sense:
Peter was working in his garden. He picked some flowers and took them into the house. He arranged them in a vase. It was heavy so he left it in the kitchen. He told his wife that he had a surprise for her.
The reflexive pronoun for "Pónganselas" is "se."
Yourself is a pronoun as it replaces your name.
The reflexive pronoun that takes the place of a third person, singular, noun (or pronoun) for a male is himself.Examples:Dad made himself a sandwich.He made himself a sandwich.The pronoun 'him' is an objective, third person, singular personal pronoun. A reflexive pronoun does not normally replace an object noun or pronoun.
Reflexive: Did Jane make the dress herself? Intensive: Yes, Jane herself made the dress. . Reflexive: Will you have to testify yourself? Intensive: I myself will not have to testify.
Ourselfs is not a word.The pronoun "ourselves" is a reflexive pronoun, a word that 'reflects' back to its antecedent.The pronoun "ourselves" is the first person, plural reflexive pronoun.Example: We made ourselvescomfortable while we waited.
Heself is not a pronoun, actually it is not a word. Himself is a male reflexive pronoun Herself is a female reflexive pronoun
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun or an intensive pronoun.The pronoun 'yourself' is a second person, singular pronoun.When used as a reflexive pronoun, it 'reflects back' to its antecedent.When used as an intensive pronoun, it emphasizes its antecedent.Examples:Mable, please make yourself comfortable. (reflexive)Mable, I can't believe you made this yourself. (intensive)
The word 'friends' is a plural, common, concrete noun; a word for people.The noun 'friends' is not a collective noun.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things in a descriptive way.Example: I went to the movies with a bunch of friends. (the noun 'bunch' is functioning as a collective noun)The term 'reflexive' is used for a reflexive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: My friends bought themselves some refreshments. (the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' takes the place of the noun 'friends' as the indirect object of the verb 'bought')
Myself is a reflexive pronoun.
It's called a reflexive pronoun.
No, the word 'yours' is a possessive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something.The corresponding, second person, reflexive pronoun is yourself.A reflexive pronoun 'reflects' back to its antecedent.Examples:That copy of the memo is yours. (possessive pronoun, takes the place of the noun 'copy' belonging to the person spoken to)You should fix yourself some lunch. (reflexive pronoun, reflects back to the pronoun 'you', the person spoken to)
The pronoun is himself, a reflexive pronoun, which takes the place of the noun Jamie. A reflexive pronoun 'reflects' back to the noun antecedent.