English, asked by aarya0232, 9 months ago

she herself cooked the dinner . kind of pronoun

Answers

Answered by suryavamsham
12

Answer:

She -Personal Pronoun.

hope it helps u

Answered by saidhanareddy583229
3

Answer:

What kind of a pronoun is the word “herself” used in this sentence "She cooked herself a meal and then she rested", emphatic or reflexive?

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I'm not familiar with the term “emphatic pronoun". To me, “emphatic" describes the construction do + bare infinitive either in the simple affirmative to add emphasis or in the negative, interrogative, or negative-interrogative because syntax rules require it to be used there. If I'm missing something, someone please fill me in.

Anyway, this is a standard use of a reflexive pronoun, as an indirect object. “She cooked them a meal” cf. “she cooked herself a meal".

Oh, I think I figured it out. You mean like “she cooked dinner herself" as opposed to “she cooked dinner with Mom's help". The word order us different when you use a reflexive pronoun as an adverb for emphasis.

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A test to see whether a reflexive pronoun is being used as an adverb is to try to replace it with an ordinary adverb. “She cooked a meal quickly" - good; “She cooked quickly a meal" -- not so good.

The only time ambiguity might occur would be with an optionally-transitive verb, where the word order would be the same for a direct object or an adverb. In such cases we usually resolve the ambiguity by using a prepositional phrase to indicate the adverbial usage: “I can see myself" [object], but “I can see for myself" [adverb].

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Explanation:

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