Yes, themselves is a pronoun. Or, at least, that's what I was told.
The word themselves is a pronoun. It is a personal pronoun.
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)
Yes, when the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' is used to emphasize the antecedent (children) it is called an intensive pronoun.
The pronoun 'they' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for specific people or things as the subject of a sentence of a clause. (The corresponding personal pronoun that functions as an object is 'them')The pronoun 'themselves' is a reflexive pronoun, a word that 'reflects back; to its antecedent, which, in the example sentence is 'they'.
That is the correct spelling of the plural object pronoun "themselves".
The word themselves is a pronoun. It is a personal pronoun.
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.
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)
Themselves is a pronoun.
Yes, when the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' is used to emphasize the antecedent (children) it is called an intensive pronoun.
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'.
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.
The pronoun 'they' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for specific people or things as the subject of a sentence of a clause. (The corresponding personal pronoun that functions as an object is 'them')The pronoun 'themselves' is a reflexive pronoun, a word that 'reflects back; to its antecedent, which, in the example sentence is 'they'.
That is the correct spelling of the plural object pronoun "themselves".
theirs they themselves
A ten letter, third person, plural pronoun is themselves (a reflexive pronoun).
"They must settles this problem themselves."The pronouns in the sentence are:they (personal pronoun)themselves (reflexive pronoun)The word 'this' can be a demonstrative pronoun when it takes the place of a noun in a sentence but in this sentence it is an adjective used to describe the noun 'problem'.