Yes, the word 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun and 'reflects back' to its antecedent.
The word 'yourself' is also an intensive pronoun, a word used to emphasize the antecedent.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a singular, second person pronoun, a word that takes the place of the noun or pronoun for the person spoken to.
The reflexive/intensive pronouns are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.
Examples:
You should make yourself some lunch for the trip. (reflexive)
I knew you could do it yourself. (intensive)
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a pronoun that 'reflects back' to the subject antecedent.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun or an intensive pronoun.The pronoun 'yourself' is a second person, singular pronoun.When used as a reflexive pronoun, it 'reflects back' to its antecedent.When used as an intensive pronoun, it emphasizes its antecedent.Examples:Mable, please make yourself comfortable. (reflexive)Mable, I can't believe you made this yourself. (intensive)
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a pronoun that 'reflects back' to the subject antecedent.
The pronoun 'yourselves' is a reflexive pronoun and an intensive pronoun.A reflexive pronoun is a word that 'reflects' back to its antecedent.An intensive pronoun is a word that 'emphasizes' its antecedent.The reflexive/intensive pronouns are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves. Example uses:I see that you've made yourself some pancakes. (reflexive)I can't believe that you made the pancakes yourself. (intensive)The pronoun 'you' is the antecedent of the pronoun 'yourself' in both sentences.
The pronoun is "yourself." That's how it's spelled.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a pronoun that 'reflects back' to the subject antecedent.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun or an intensive pronoun.The pronoun 'yourself' is a second person, singular pronoun.When used as a reflexive pronoun, it 'reflects back' to its antecedent.When used as an intensive pronoun, it emphasizes its antecedent.Examples:Mable, please make yourself comfortable. (reflexive)Mable, I can't believe you made this yourself. (intensive)
You yourself can answer that question.
"Yourself" is a pronoun, more particularly a reflexive pronoun.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a pronoun that 'reflects back' to the subject antecedent.
The pronouns are your and yourself.
No. Yourself is a pronoun, not a preposition. It is the reflexive (self-directed) form.
The correct pronoun is "Javita and you were in an accident."The pronoun 'you' is a personal pronoun which takes the place of the noun (name) for the person spoken to.The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a word that reflects back to its antecedent.Example: You didn't hurt yourself in the accident.The reflexive pronoun 'youself' is reflecting back to the subject of the sentence, 'you'.
No, the pronoun 'yourself' is 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.A demonstrative pronoun takes the place of a noun, indicating near or far in place or time, previously mentioned or indicated by gesture. The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.Examples:Mable, please make yourself comfortable. (reflexive)Mable, I can't believe you made that yourself. (intensive)Mable, I can't believe you made that yourself. (demonstrative)
The pronoun 'yourselves' is a reflexive pronoun and an intensive pronoun.A reflexive pronoun is a word that 'reflects' back to its antecedent.An intensive pronoun is a word that 'emphasizes' its antecedent.The reflexive/intensive pronouns are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves. Example uses:I see that you've made yourself some pancakes. (reflexive)I can't believe that you made the pancakes yourself. (intensive)The pronoun 'you' is the antecedent of the pronoun 'yourself' in both sentences.
The pronoun yourself is a reflexive pronoun, meaning 'reflecting back' as a mirror. Example sentence:You made this yourself? You should be proud of yourself.The other reflexive pronouns are myself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.
Yourself is not an adjective. It's a reflexive pronoun.