Myself/yourself/themselves
etc.
A. Study this example:
George cut himself when he was
shaving this morning.
We use myself/yourself/himself
etc. (reflexive pronouns)
when the subject and object
are the same:
subject -> (George) cut
(himself). <- object
The reflexive pronouns are:
singular: myself yourself (one
person) himself/herself/itself
plural: ourselves yourselves
(more than one person) themselves
* I don't want you to pay for
me. I'll pay for myself. (not 'I'll pay for me')
* Julia had a great holiday.
She enjoyed herself very much.
* Do you sometimes talk to
yourself? (said to one person)
* If you want more to eat,
help yourselves. (said to more than one person)
Compare:
* It's not our fault. You
can't blame us.
* It's our own fault. We blame
ourselves.
Note that we do not use
myself/yourself etc. after 'bring/take something with ...':
* It might rain. I'll take an
umbrella with me. (not 'with myself')
B. We do not use myself etc.
after concentrate/feel/relax/meet:
* You must try and
concentrate. (not 'concentrate yourself')
* 'Do you feel nervous?' 'Yes,
I can't relax.'
* What time shall we meet?
(not 'meet ourselves', not 'meet us')
We normally use
wash/shave/dress without myself etc.:
* He got up, washed, shaved
and dressed. (not 'washed himself' etc.)
But we say 'I dried myself'.
C. Study the difference
between -selves and each other:
* Tom and Ann stood in front
of the mirror and looked at themselves. (= Tom and Ann looked at Tom and
Ann)
but * Tom looked at Ann; Ann
looked at Tom. They looked at each other.
You can use one another
instead of each other:
* How long have you and Bill
known one another? (or ... known each other)
* Sue and Ann don't like each
other. (or ... don't like one another)
D. We also use myself/yourself
etc. in another way. For example:
* 'Who repaired your bicycle
for you?' 'Nobody. I repaired it myself.'
'I repaired it myself' = I
repaired it, not anybody else. Here, myself is used to emphasize I (=it makes
it
stronger). Some more examples:
* I'm not going to do it for
you. You can do it yourself. (= you, not me)
* Let's paint the house
ourselves. It will be much cheaper.
* The film itself wasn't very
good but I liked the music.
* I don't think Sue will get
the job. Sue herself doesn't think she'll get it. (or Sue doesn't think she'll
get it
herself.)
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