The correct phrase should be: "The girl with whom I met is very kind."
"Whom" is used as the object of a preposition (like "with"), while "who" is used as a subject.
"Himself" is a reflexive pronoun used when the subject and object refer to the same person.
It reflects back to "my father," showing he had standards for his own self.
Itself reflects the action back to the subject (the frog).
Reflexive pronouns are used when the subject and object are the same.
"Himself" is a reflexive pronoun.
It is used here to reflect back on the subject "The Son."
It indicates that the action was done by him for his own enjoyment.
"Dog" is a singular animal, so the reflexive pronoun "itself" is used.
"The dog hurt itself while playing." is grammatically correct.
Herself = female
Himself = male
Itself = animal
The sentence requires a reflexive pronoun (e.g., myself, herself, itself) to show that the subject ("She") is the object of her own anger.
"Herself" is the correct reflexive pronoun matching the subject "She."
It is correct to say 'What does she look like?' .
This is asking for general information about someone's appearance.
It is also correct, but less common, to say 'How does she look?'
ND06-08-2023
"Who stands first" is a relative clause because it describes "the boy" using the relative pronoun "who."
Relative clauses provide additional information about a noun and usually begin with who, which, or that.
First-person pronouns: We, us, our,and ourselves
Second-person pronouns: you, your, yours
Third-person pronouns: he, him, his, himself, she, her, hers, herself, it, its, itself, they, them, their, theirs, and themselves