Yes, the word 'themselves' is a plural reflexive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns for those spoken about.
Examples:
The children made themselves some Sandwiches.
Jack and Jill made themselves some sandwiches.
No, "themselves" is a plural reflexive pronoun used to refer back to multiple people or things. It is used when the subject and the object of the verb are the same and there are more than one of them.
No, "themselves" is not a conjunction. It is a reflexive pronoun that refers back to the subject of the sentence. Conjunctions are words like "and," "but," "or," that connect words, phrases, or clauses.
There is one pronoun in the sentence: themselves.The pronoun 'themselves' is the third person, plural, reflexive pronoun.The pronoun 'themselves' reflects back to the antecedent 'children'.
True. Intensive pronouns, also known as emphatic pronouns, are used to emphasize a noun or pronoun in a sentence. They are formed by adding "-self" (singular) or "-selves" (plural) to reflexive pronouns, like "myself," "yourself," "himself," "herself," "itself," "ourselves," "yourselves," and "themselves."
The word 'themself' is used informally when the gender of a person is unknown. The reflexive/intensive pronoun is themselves, because the personal pronoun 'them' is the plural form. The more appropriate pronoun to use when the gender is unknown or could be either male or female are 'they' and 'them', as a pronoun for people in general; or the more awkward he/she.
No, the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' does not agree with the antecedent subject pronoun 'you'.The correct use of the reflexive pronoun 'reflects' back to the antecedent subject in person, number, and gender. Examples:You don't care for yourself. (second person, singular)You don't care for yourselves. (second person, plural)They don't care for themselves. (third person, plural)
A ten letter, third person, plural pronoun is themselves (a reflexive pronoun).
The third person, plural, reflexive pronoun that takes the place of the plural noun 'boys' is themselves.Example: The boys made themselves some lunch.
The pronoun themselves is the third person, plural, reflexive pronoun and an intensive pronoun.A reflexive pronoun is used to 'reflect back' to its antecedent.An intensive pronoun is used to emphasize its antecedent.Example functions:The children made themselves some soup for lunch. (reflexive)The children themselves made the soup for lunch. (intensive)
No, "themselves" is not a conjunction. It is a reflexive pronoun that refers back to the subject of the sentence. Conjunctions are words like "and," "but," "or," that connect words, phrases, or clauses.
There is one pronoun in the sentence: themselves.The pronoun 'themselves' is the third person, plural, reflexive pronoun.The pronoun 'themselves' reflects back to the antecedent 'children'.
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')
The word themselves is not a noun; themselves is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun. Themselves is a reflexive and an intensive pronoun. A reflexive pronoun reflects back on its antecedent; an intensive pronoun is used to emphasize its antecedent. Examples: reflexive use: They did the work themselves. intensive use: They themselves did the work.
no because their is already plural
True. Intensive pronouns, also known as emphatic pronouns, are used to emphasize a noun or pronoun in a sentence. They are formed by adding "-self" (singular) or "-selves" (plural) to reflexive pronouns, like "myself," "yourself," "himself," "herself," "itself," "ourselves," "yourselves," and "themselves."
No - herself is a pronoun- either reflexive or intensive, depending on how it is used. Reflexive: The wicked queen look at herself in the mirror and declared herself the fairest of them all. Intensive: I was amazed to see the queen , herself, shopping at the supermarket.
The word 'themself' is used informally when the gender of a person is unknown. The reflexive/intensive pronoun is themselves, because the personal pronoun 'them' is the plural form. The more appropriate pronoun to use when the gender is unknown or could be either male or female are 'they' and 'them', as a pronoun for people in general; or the more awkward he/she.
No, the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' does not agree with the antecedent subject pronoun 'you'.The correct use of the reflexive pronoun 'reflects' back to the antecedent subject in person, number, and gender. Examples:You don't care for yourself. (second person, singular)You don't care for yourselves. (second person, plural)They don't care for themselves. (third person, plural)