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:
No, the correct phrase would be "you don't care for yourself."
No, the word "lacks" is not used correctly in the sentence. The correct word should be "lax," which means lacking in strictness or care. So the corrected sentence would be: "Many of you have become lax and are consistently late."
Both sentences are grammatically correct. "I don't like this" is a stronger statement indicating dislike, while "I don't care for this" is more neutral and implies a lack of preference. Choose the one that best conveys your intended level of dislike.
The correct spelling is custody (control, care, or physical possession).
The proper nouns "Jackson" and "Happy Child Day Care" should be capitalized in the sentence.
The sentence, "You took care of ourselves." is an incorrect use of pronouns.The pronoun 'ourselves' is a first person pronoun. It can't 'reflect' or 'intensify' the second person pronoun 'you'.The sentence should read:"We took care of ourselves."Or:"You took car of yourselves."This pronouns 'ourselves' and 'yourselves' are functioning as reflexive pronouns, reflecting back to the antecedents 'we' and 'you' respectively.
She knew the correct answer was 5, but she didn't care.
Yes
They care about themselves, then their family.
Yes, your grammar is correct. Your sentence "Just take care on your way home" is a polite way to tell someone to be safe while going home.
The correctly used pronoun is C, it(antecedent 'dog')In sentence A, the pronoun 'they' is a subjective pronoun used as the object of the preposition 'of'.The correct sentence is: Sarah has two dogs and takes good care of them.In sentence B, thepronoun'you' is the second person; the noun 'Sarah' (the antecedent from the previous sentence) is the third person.The correct sentence is: Sometimes they go for walks with her.
I will always care for you.
If you are trying to convey that you are fond of someone use "care about"."care for" is correct for something like-"I care for my bedridden grandmother",but is also correct when you say, for instance, "I don't care for sushi", or "i don't care for the color red in evening gowns".Both are correct, with different meanings. To care forusually means to be fond of, to like. But it also may mean to take care of. To care about means to be interested in or concerned with something.
they dont they care about tuturing
It is, but an incomplete fragment sentence.
Certainly. Quokkas are wild animals, and all wild animals take care of themselves.
No the owners take care of them
The correct wording is: Night and weekend care are negotiable. To say it another way: Care on nights and weekends is negotiable.