In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific pronouns for male or female.
The reflexive pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a male is himself.
The reflexive pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a female is herself.
Example: Molly made herself a sandwich.
him = himself
them = themselves
Themselves
itselves.
The plural of himself is themselves.
Himselves
The plural of the word half is halves. For example: He kept both halves of the cake for himself.
"I" and "you" are both personal pronouns that are considered second person, but they take different forms in subject-verb agreement. "I" takes a singular verb form, while "you" takes a plural verb form in English grammar. This is a standard convention in English to distinguish between singular and plural subjects.
There is actually no word themself. It can be himself, herself or itself but it cannot be themself. The correct word is themselves, which is also the plural.
The noun fighting is a verbal noun, or gerund, and these often do not have plurals.
If more than one man is being referenced, in this case the correct plural for "him" (or "her") would be them (which is gender non-specific). They are object pronouns."They" is the plural form of "he" (or "she") which are subject pronouns.
To refer to a single individual or thing, change "themselves" to "themself." However, some prefer to use "themselves" even for singular pronouns to be inclusive of gender identity.
The three grammatical persons are:the person speaking (singular), or a group to which that person belongs (plural)the person (singular) or group of people (plural) being spoken tosome other person/thing (singular) or people/things (plural)The person saying the pronoun "we" is referring to a group to which he himself or she herself belongs, so it's first person plural.
The latter of the two, as "everyone" is a plural designation.
One person might use the plural when talking about his or her family or home: "Our house is white with brown shutters." A person might use the plural when speaking about a class: "Guess what we learned in math class!" A person might speak in the plural when speaking about his or her ethnic heritage: "We don't do that in our country." There is a so-called "royal we" when a king or queen speaks of himself or herself in the plural. "We are planning to visit your province next year." And there is a "reporter's we," when a reporter speaks of himself or herself as "we": "We reported on the uprisings last night. Tonight we'll be adding to our coverage."
Llamar means To Call. Se is himself. Se llama means (literally) he calls himself. Se llama Brian means He calls himself Brian. This is used in introductions. Llamar is a regular -ar, reflexive verb, which means it is conjugated (Myself) Me llamo. (Ourselves) Nos llamamos/llamamas. (You informal singular) Te llamas. (You informal plural) Vos llamais (don't forget accent mark). (Himself/Herself/You formal) Se llama. (Themselves/You formal plural) Se llaman.