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Réflexive

Réflexive is a term used across disciplines to describe forms or relations that refer back to the subject or to a single entity. In grammar, a reflexive construction occurs when the object of a verb is the same as its subject, often marked by a reflexive pronoun. Reflexive meanings can indicate self-directed actions, experiences, or states, and they are distinguished from ordinary transitive actions by the self-reference.

In English, reflexive pronouns include myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, and themselves. Examples: “She

Cross-linguistically, reflexive marking varies. French uses a reflexive pronoun with pronominal verbs in phrases like se

Reflexive should not be confused with reciprocal constructions, which involve two or more subjects performing an

Overall, reflexivity captures self-reference in grammar, language use, and formal systems.

dressed
herself,”
“They
blamed
themselves.”
Reflexive
forms
can
be
used
as
objects
or,
less
commonly,
for
emphasis
(the
latter
called
an
intensive
use).
Some
verbs
require
a
reflexive
pronoun
in
certain
languages,
even
when
the
subject
and
object
seem
the
same,
while
others
permit
plain
objects.
laver
(to
wash
oneself);
Spanish
uses
se
in
a
similar
way
(lavarse);
German
uses
sich
with
third-person
forms
(sich
waschen).
In
many
languages,
reflexive
constructions
are
integrated
into
the
verb
morphology
or
rely
on
clitic
pronouns,
and
they
may
interact
with
voice,
aspect,
or
politeness
systems.
action
on
each
other
(each
other,
one
another).
In
logic
and
mathematics,
a
relation
is
reflexive
if
every
element
relates
to
itself:
for
all
a,
aRa.