If you're seeing this message, it means we're having trouble loading external resources on our website.

If you're behind a web filter, please make sure that the domains *.kastatic.org and *.kasandbox.org are unblocked.

Main content

Reflexive pronouns

What are reflexive pronouns? When a subject and an object of the sentence are the same thing, it's time to use a reflexive pronoun, as in "I saw myself in the mirror". The subject is "I", and the object is "me", but it's not grammatical in Standard English to say "I saw me in the mirror". Instead, you'd say "myself".

Want to join the conversation?

  • female robot grace style avatar for user Robin
    What's going on when people say, "The queen herself appeared in person to congratulate the boy"? Also does it need commas?
    (36 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
    • female robot grace style avatar for user Inger Hohler
      You've given an example of the emphatic pronoun. An emphatic pronoun is used for emphasis. Actually, your sentence has double emphasis because you've also added "in person". The emphatic pronouns are the same as the reflexive pronouns. The sentence does not seem to need a comma. It's not a list, there is no direct speech or address. It's not two sentences linked with "but" , or a dependent or independent clause. It is true that comma is sometimes added for emphasis, but seeing you have already used two emphatic elements that would really be gilding the lily with gold and akin to finishing a sentence with three times !
      (52 votes)
  • duskpin tree style avatar for user CeciG04
    So is yall or yins improper grammar?
    (12 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
    • duskpin ultimate style avatar for user Polina Vitić
      Not necessarily. Y'all, for instance, follows the rules of grammar where the apostrophe is used to shorten "you all" to y'all.

      Yins (or yinz) means the same as y'all - they are both second person plural pronouns. In "standard" English, the pronoun you is used for both singular and plural second person pronouns.

      Even though y'all and yins are not considered standard English - you may want to avoid using them in formal settings - some scholars have argued that words like these are useful because they are needed to show the difference between speaking to a group ("y'all") or just one person ("you").

      Hope this helps!
      (24 votes)
  • leafers sapling style avatar for user Levi Bocook
    "Janelle is herself" that is deep
    (19 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • starky tree style avatar for user ☆Amelia☆
    Question: What are grammarians
    noun: Grammarian
    plural: Grammarians
    Study: Grammar, English, and more (i think that every language has grammar)

    Definition: A Grammarian is a person who studies about grammar/english to be fluent and the person knows more advanced so he can understand better and speak better
    (17 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • blobby green style avatar for user Chris Human
    Hi, can I say: "Janelle made her/his breakfast"? instead of "Janelle made herself breakfast" ?
    (4 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
    • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
      For whom did Janelle make breakfast? For her mother, for the truck driver who came into the cafe, for her teacher? If Janelle made breakfast for Janelle, then the word you want is "herself." If Janelle made breakfast for someone else, then choose "her" or "his" or "their" depending on who that person was.
      (23 votes)
  • female robot ada style avatar for user tee-jay ade__Army_Stay
    In my school they call "vidya and myself" correct. they call it concord. why?
    (2 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
    • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
      The English word root "cord" indicates a relation of two different things. So _dis_cord is when those things relate in opposition to each other, and _con_cord is when they relate in harmony with each other. Those who have chosen the names for various grammatical constructions in the curriculum you follow in your school have chosen "concord" to reflect the harmony of Vidya and Myself. Is that what you were asking?
      (14 votes)
  • primosaur ultimate style avatar for user Sujal J.👍
    At the instructor uses me in the sentence
    You can talk to Vidya or me.
    Couldn't he have replaced me with I?
    (0 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • blobby green style avatar for user taywansilveira2022
    nice!
    (6 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • sneak peak green style avatar for user Addy S.
    So if I said... James wanted pizza,but he wanted a burger too. Would he be considered as James?
    (2 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user Joel C.
    At around , David writes:
    "Janelle made herself breakfast"

    He describes reflexive pronouns as the object and subject being the same thing. What I don't get is why "breakfast" is not the object here. Is Janelle doing the action of "making" on herself?
    (5 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
    • sneak peak blue style avatar for user CzechLiszt1838
      The "object" is the thing the verb relates to, and in the sentence "Janelle made herself breakfast" the verb is referring to the act of Janelle making herself something rather than Her making breakfast. It is used to specify the fact that she makes it for herself rather than the open-endedness of making breakfast as it does not refer to whom the breakfast is for.
      (1 vote)

Video transcript

- [Voiceover] Hello, grammarians. Let's talk about reflexive pronouns and just as a word of warning, this means I'm going to be talking about myself a lot. What I mean is that, in English, we have this distinction between the personal pronoun, so for example, me, and its reflexive pronoun, which is myself. And we use these pronouns in very specific cases. So I'm gonna show you what all of those reflexive pronouns look like contrasted with their personal pronoun forms and then we're going to talk about how we use them. So in the first person we say the personal pronoun is me, the reflexive pronoun is myself. The first person plural personal pronoun is us and the reflexive form of that is ourselves. Then in the second person, both plural and singular personal pronoun is you and then, in the reflexive it can be either yourself when you're addressing one person or yourselves when the "you" you are talking to consists of more than one person. The singular third person pronouns look like this it, her, and him and their reflective versions are as follows... itself, herself, and himself. Finally, the personal pronoun them becomes the reflexive pronoun, themselves. Now, all of these are what we would call object pronouns. They can all be the object of a verb. So they're never the do-ers, they're always the do-ees. With the exception of you or it, none of these pronouns can be the subject of a sentence. In Standard American English, it is not grammatical to say "Me eat a cookie" for example. It's part of why Cookie Monster sounds so funny. So then the question becomes, when do you use these? So the place for these object pronouns to go is in the back end of a sentence. what we call the predicate, where the object of the verb lives. So, for example, "She poked me." She is the subject of the sentence and me is the object, is the object of the verb poked. It is the do-ee, it is the thing that something is done to not the do-er. So that's when you'd use object pronouns, generally. But, when do you use reflexive pronouns? You use reflexive pronouns when the subject and the object of a sentence are the same thing. Let me show you an example sentence. Janelle made herself breakfast. So in this sentence, herself and Janelle are the same person as opposed to the other possibility which is Janelle making breakfast for someone else. Janelle made us breakfast, and in this case, this usage is not reflective. She's not doing a thing for herself or to herself. She's making breakfast for other people. And so, you'd just use the regular personal object pronoun there. You can only use the reflexive pronoun when the subject and the object of the sentence are the same thing. Janelle is the same thing as herself. Janelle is not the same thing as us, so we would say us here and not ourselves. How about this one? Roderick saw me in the mirror. Now I am not named Roderick. I am not the same thing as Roderick, and if I were writing a sentence about myself, I would say, I saw myself in the mirror. Roderick and I, me, are not the same person. I and myself are the same person. The same person as Roderick is Roderick. So if we were to say, Roderick saw Roderick in the mirror, we would render that as, Roderick saw himself because the subject here and the object here are the same thing. So remember, you use reflexive pronouns when the subject and the object of a sentence are the same thing. It's really easy to get tripped up this way, especially if there's a compound object in the sentence. For example, you can talk to Vidya or myself. I see this all the time, and in Standard American English this is not correct because you is not the same thing as me. And it's easy to get confused because you're talking about two people here in this object and that's a little befuddling. It kind of throws you off. And so there's a test you can do. If you're unsure of whether or not it should be Vidya or myself or Vidya or me, which is what I would say, how do you tell? Take the other person out of the object, just for a little bit. So would you say, you can talk to myself or would you say, you can talk to me? Well, since we know you is not the same thing as myself, and you can only use reflexive pronouns when the subject and the object are the same thing, the answer is me. So then, we bring Vidya back, we bring the other part of the object back, and it becomes, you can talk to Vidya or me. So when in doubt, sub it out. Take the other part of the object and just pretend it's not there and just think about how the subject and the object connect. Chances are, you won't actually end up using a reflexive pronoun. Perform that little check and you'll never go wrong. You can learn anything. David out.