Reflexive pronoun
Reflexive pronouns are treated in the AWE database as a subset of of personal pronouns. (Some other writers treat them as a separate type of pronoun. Reflexive pronouns are the words we use to refer back to a noun or pronoun previously mentioned in the sentence. If we say “John hit himâ€, we presume that the victim of the assault was a second person, other than John. If, on the other hand, we say “John hit himselfâ€, we presume that he has had an accident. Singular reflexive pronouns end in –self, like myself, herself and itself; plural ones, like themselves, yourselves and ourselves end in -selves. These suffixes are added to the relevant personal pronoun in either the objective (him- and them-) or possessive forms (my-, your- and our-). Two (it- and her- are ambiguous. Note that it is regarded as a mistake in formal English to say 'theirselves'
or 'hisself', though both are normal in some dialects of spoken British English.