The pronoun 'myself' is a reflexive pronoun, a word that 'reflects' back on a noun in the sentence.
The reflexive pronouns are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.
A reflexive pronoun functions as an appositive; a word used to rename a noun or pronoun used earlier in a sentence. When a reflexive pronoun can rename a subject or an object noun. Examples:
Subject: I made myself some breakfast. ('myself' is the appositive for the subject pronoun 'I', the indirect object of the verb 'made')
Object: I gave the message to John himself. ('himself' is the appositive for the noun 'John', which is the object of the preposition 'to')
"Myself" is a reflexive pronoun, which is used when the subject and the object of a sentence refer to the same person or thing. It is used to emphasize the subject or to indicate that the action is being performed on the subject.
The reflexive pronoun in the sentence is "myself." It is used when the subject and object of the sentence refer to the same person or thing, showing that the action is being done by the subject to themselves.
subject pronoun
The pronoun her is an object pronoun; for example:We see her everyday.
The pronoun for a letter is it (subject or object); the pronoun for the letters of the alphabet is they (subject) or them (object).
An emphatic pronoun is an appositive to a noun or another pronoun and emphasizes the importance of the noun or the antecedent of the pronoun. A reflexive pronoun fills some function in the sentence, usually a direct or indirect object, different from that of the noun or pronoun pronoun to which it refers. Example as intensive: "I will feed the dog myself" or "I myself will feed the dog" connotes that the speaker or writer believes in his or her own importance, reliability, or special competence, while "Even with an injured arm, I can feed myself" does not. The latter is an example of a genuinely reflexive pronoun, in which the pronoun in question is the direct object of the verb in the sentence, not a mere appositive to the subject "I".
No, it is a subject pronoun because object pronouns are used as the object of a sentence. For example: "They go to the movies." = They (subject pronoun) "I go to the movies with them." = Them (object pronoun)
The pronoun you can be the subject or the object of a sentence or phrase. Examples: Subject: You look great. Object: That dress becomes you.
The pronoun 'they' is a subject pronoun and subject of the sentence.The corresponding object pronoun is 'them'.Example: I know because I tasted them.
There is no pronoun used as an object. The pronoun 'you' is used twice in the sentence. The pronoun 'you' can be a subject or an object pronoun. The first 'you' is the subject pronoun, the subject of the sentence. The second 'you' is the subject of the noun clause 'what you expected to see'; the clause is the object of the sentence but the word you is the subject of that clause.
Yes, the pronoun 'their' is the third person, plural, possessive adjective.Example: The Jacksons are expecting their second child. (the child of the people spoken about, 'the Jacksons')
His is a possessive pronoun; his can show possession for the subject or the object of a sentence. Examples: For a subject: His book was left on the bus. For an object: The rain ruined his book.