Yes, reflexive pronouns are implied in English and in Spanish.
EX: I brush my hair.
-> Yo peinarme.
'A verb is reflexive' = 'un verbo es reflexivo'. What it means, is that (generally, in English as well as Spanish and other languages) a verb is accompanied by '(my/your/him/her/its)self' or '(our/your/their)selves'; (or the equivalent so-called 'reflexive pronoun(s)' in other languages. In Spanish, 'me/te/se/le/nos/os/les'). E.g. I wash the windows = Lavo las ventanas I wash myself/you wash yourself, etc. = me lavo/te lavas, etc. In Spanish you also use the reflexive if you say 'I wash my hands' = me lavo las manos (literally: I wash myself the hands).
Personal pronouns and their dative, accusative and reflexive pronouns: Yo / me / mí Tú / te / ti Él / usted / ella / le / lo / la / se Nosotros / nos vosotros / vosotras / os Ellos / ustedes / ellas / les / los / las / se
'The 'pongan...' part of the word makes it third-person plural. In Spanish, this could be 'ellos' ('they' masculine or mixed), 'ellas' ('they' feminine), or it could be 'ustedes' ('you' formal, plural, male/female/mixed gender)
This can mean many things. With an accent, "sé" is the first person singular conjugation of the verb "saber", meaning "I know". It can be a reflexive pronoun - "ella se ducha" literally is "she showers herself", but is translated as "she takes a shower". It can also be used to signify Impersonal statements - "se habla español" means "Spanish is spoken".
In Spanish, the word 'esto' means the English word 'this'. This is a demonstrative pronoun that is the singular masculine form. The singular feminine form is 'esta'.
"Himself" is an English reflexive pronoun.
Yourself is a pronoun as it replaces your name.
"Heself" is a reflexive pronoun. It is a non-standard and archaic form used in some dialects or older texts, where "he" would be the subject pronoun and "himself" would be the reflexive pronoun.
What is the difference between a reflexive pronoun and an intensive pronoun? How do reflexive pronouns function in a sentence? Can an intensive pronoun be substituted for a reflexive pronoun? Why do we use reflexive pronouns when the subject and object are the same? Can you give examples of sentences where reflexive pronouns are needed?
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)
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.
The sentence edited to use a reflexive pronoun:Don't work in pairs, everyone has to do the exercise themselves.Don't work in pairs, everyone exercise by yourself.Note: The sentence, "Don't work in pairs, everyone has to do the exercise." is an imperative sentence. The subject of the sentence is "you", an implied subject. In this sentence, the pronoun "you" is used as a plural.In the first edited example, the reflexive pronoun "themselves" is "reflecting" the plural subject antecedent "you".In the second edited example, the reflexive pronoun "yourself" is "reflecting" the singular indefinite pronoun "everyone", the subject of the second part of the compound sentence.
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.
The correct pronoun is "Javita and you were in an accident."The pronoun 'you' is a personal pronoun which takes the place of the noun (name) for the person spoken to.The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a word that reflects back to its antecedent.Example: You didn't hurt yourself in the accident.The reflexive pronoun 'youself' is reflecting back to the subject of the sentence, 'you'.
'A verb is reflexive' = 'un verbo es reflexivo'. What it means, is that (generally, in English as well as Spanish and other languages) a verb is accompanied by '(my/your/him/her/its)self' or '(our/your/their)selves'; (or the equivalent so-called 'reflexive pronoun(s)' in other languages. In Spanish, 'me/te/se/le/nos/os/les'). E.g. I wash the windows = Lavo las ventanas I wash myself/you wash yourself, etc. = me lavo/te lavas, etc. In Spanish you also use the reflexive if you say 'I wash my hands' = me lavo las manos (literally: I wash myself the hands).
It's called a reflexive pronoun.
Myself is a reflexive pronoun.