ourselves
such a pronoun obviously doesn't exist:D
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 opposite pronoun is myself, or possibly ourselves (plural).
The plural form of self is selves. For example, you could say to one person, "You can probably do that yourself", but if speaking to a group you should say, "You can probably do that yourselves".
Unfortunately, for you, my friend, there is no plural for could. To make an existing word into a plural, it must be a noun (eg. dog, desk, planet). I, myself, don' exactly understand why such a question would be asked? If you don't mind me asking, why?
The noun 'cookie' is a count noun. The plural form is 'cookies'.Examples:Would you like a cookie?I baked the cookies myself.
The singular reflexive pronouns are myself, yourself, himself, herself, and itself.The plural reflexive pronouns are ourselves, yourselves, and themselves.
Photographs is a plural noun, so it needs to be made singular, resulting in the word photograph. From there, photograph needs to be possessive, which results in the word photograph's. Photograph is the singular form of photographs. Photographs is the plural form. Photograph's is the singular possessive form. Photofgraphs' is the plural possessive form.
The reflexive pronouns end with -self(singular) or -selves (plural).The reflexive pronouns are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.
All of the reflexive pronouns contain the word 'self' in the singular or 'selves' in the plural. They are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.
Is it possible, that I (singular), can plural (more than 1) all by myself? OR, do I (singular) need another- (also more than 1) as an addition before I do....? Is this how math started.