"Her" is a third person feminine pronoun. It is used in an accusative sense (when the pronoun is the object of a verb or preposition) as in "I married her when I was under the influence of alcohol" or "Give the alligator to her". It is also used in a genitive sense (the pronoun is the owner of an object or attribute) as in "Jane will kill you if you eat her chocolates" or "I think it was her humility that first attracted me".
"Herself" like all the -self words, are designed to express reflexive action. If someone other than Jane kisses Jane, it is "Albert kissed her." but if Jane kisses Jane, then it is "Jane kissed herself." Himself is the same thing: "The guy in Fight Club hits himself" and so are myself, ourselves, yourself, yourselves and themselves.
Sometimes "herself" and the other -self pronouns are used emphatically, as in "We all obeyed Miss Angstrom's orders to search the building, not realizing that Miss Angstrom herself was the mysterious Black Claw", or "Not surprisingly, for the fifth year in a row, the Anita Bulman award was given to Anita Bulman herself." There is a sense in this kind of sentence that something that should have been happening to another is reflecting back on its author: Miss Anstrom is leading the search for the Black Claw when she is the Black Claw. She is therefore searching for herself. Ms. Bulman should be giving the award to someone other than Anita Bulman, but she is not. She is giving it to herself. This emphatic should only be used in such cases.
Recently there has been an increase of the use of "myself" to mean "me" in phrases such as "Please contact myself on Monday". This is wrong, ugly, pretentious and to be avoided. This particular rot has not yet spread to "herself"
The pronoun himself is an intensive or reflexive pronoun, depending on how it is used in a sentence. Examples:
Reflexive, reflecting back to the subject: He is a good friend himself.
Intensive, emphasizing the subject: He himself is a good friend.
There is no pronoun spelled 'hisself'. The reflexive pronoun for a male is himself.
The reflexive pronouns are myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.
Example: John made himself some breakfast.
The pronoun 'him' is a personal pronoun which takes the place of a noun for specific male as the object of a verb or a preposition. The personal pronouns are I, you, we, he, she, it, me, us, him, her, they, them.
Examples:
Object of the verb: John left this for you. You will have to thank him.
Object of the preposition: We pick up your new dog today. Do you have a name for him?
The word 'himself' is a pronoun, a reflexive pronoun or an intensive pronoun.
When used as a reflexive pronoun, it 'reflects back' to its antecedent.
When used as an intensive pronoun, it emphasizes its antecedent.
Examples:
Dad got up early and made himself breakfast. (reflexive)
Dad himself got up early and made breakfast. (intensive)
Although James was happy having the time to himself, his wife Pauline was not enjoying herself at the party.
He should pay for the meal himself.
She decided to change the tyre herself since nobody offered to help.
"Himself" is a reflexive pronoun, which refers back to the subject of the sentence. It is used when the subject and the object are the same person or thing.
Hisself is not a correct form of the word. The correct form would be, himself, or his self.
While John is busy enjoying himself; Jane is busy cleaning the house by herself.
"Himself" is not any kind of preposition; it is a reflexive pronoun.
The pronoun 'himself' is a reflexive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a singular noun for a male, used to 'reflect' back to its antecedent.Example: Dad got up and made himself some breakfast.The pronoun 'himself' is also an intensive pronoun, used to emphasize its antecedent.Example: Dad himself got up and made breakfast.
"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.
The pronoun 'himself' is a reflexive pronoun, a word used to 'reflect' back to the antecedent.The reflexive pronouns are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.Example: Dad made himself some breakfast.A reflexive pronoun also functions as an intensive pronoun, when placed following the antecedent to emphasize the antecedent. Example: Dad himself made some breakfast.
The word 'himself' is a reflexive pronoun; a word that reflects its antecedent noun; for example:Dad fixed the roof himself.A reflexive pronoun is an intensive pronoun which emphasises the antecedent even more and is usually placed immediately following the antecedent, for example:Dad, himself, fixed the roof.
The word 'himself' is not a noun.The word 'himself' is a pronoun, a reflexive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a male that 'reflects back' to its antecedent.Example: Father makes himself a sandwich before leaving for work. (the pronoun 'himself' takes the place of the noun 'father' as the indirect object of the verb)
"Himself" is an English reflexive pronoun.
The pronoun "himself" is functioning as a reflexive pronoun, used to 'reflect back' to the antecedent "Jason".An intensive pronoun is used to emphasize its antecedent, for example: "Jason himself finished the remodeling."
The pronoun 'himself' is both a reflexive and an intensive pronoun, depending on use.A reflexive pronoun 'reflects' back to the noun antecedent. Example:Dad made himself some breakfast.An intensive pronoun is placed immediately after the antecedent to emphasize the antecedent. Example: Dad himself made some breakfast.
The word 'himself' is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun 'himself' is a reflexive pronoun, a word used to 'reflect' back to the antecedent.The reflexive pronouns are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.Example: Dad made himself some breakfast.A reflexive pronoun also functions as an intensive pronoun, when placed following the antecedent to emphasize the antecedent.Example: Dad himself made some breakfast.
The pronoun is himself, a reflexive pronoun, which takes the place of the noun Jamie. A reflexive pronoun 'reflects' back to the noun antecedent.
The pronoun himself is a reflexive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun and 'reflects' its noun or pronoun antecedent. Example: John made himself some breakfast.A reflexive pronoun also functions a an intensive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun, placed immediately following its antecedent for emphasis.Example: John himself made some breakfast.