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Reflexive pronoun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Reflexive pronoun
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"Herself" redirects here. For the toy elf, see
Herself the Elf.
"Himself" redirects here. For other uses, see
Himself (disambiguation).
"Oneself" redirects here. For the hip-hop artist, see
Oneself (artist).
"Ourselves" redirects here. For the 1988 punk album, see
Ourselves (album).
A reflexive pronoun is a
pronoun that is preceded by the noun or pronoun to which it refers (its antecedent) within the same clause. In
generative grammar, a reflexive pronoun is an
anaphor that must be bound by its
antecedent (see
binding). In some languages, there is a difference between
reflexive and non-reflexive
pronouns; but the exact conditions that determine whether something is bound are not yet well defined and depend on the language in question. It depends on the part of the sentence that the pronoun is in.
In
English, the function of a reflexive pronoun is among the meanings of the words
myself,
yourself,
thyself (archaic),
himself (in some dialects, "
hisself"),
herself,
itself,
oneself,
ourselves,
ourself (as majestic plural),
yourselves, and
themselves (in some dialects, "
theirselves"). In the statements "I see him" and "She sees you", the objects are not the same persons as the subjects, and regular pronouns are used. However, when the person being seen is the same as the person who is seeing, the reflexive pronoun is used: "I see myself" or "She sees herself".
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