¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Reflexives
1. reflexive [n] - See also: reflexive
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reflexives
Literary usage of Reflexives
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Grammar of the Latin Language by Ethan Allen Andrews, Solomon Stoddard (1882)
"In dépendent clauses, in which the subject does not remain tLe same, the reflexives
are commonly used in references to the leading subject, ..."
2. The Masai: Their Language and Folklore by Alfred Claud Hollis (1905)
"DATIVE VERBS USED AS reflexives AND NEUTER OR QUASI-PASSIVES. When dative verbs
are used as reflexives, the affixes are variable as in simple reflexive ..."
3. A Grammar of the Latin Language: For the Use of Schools and Colleges by Ethan Allen Andrews (1857)
"In dependent clauses, in which the subject does not remain ' the same, the
reflexives are commonly used in references to the leading subject, ..."
4. Grammar of the Latin Language by Ethan Allen Andrews (1867)
"In dependent clauses, in which the subject does not remain the same, the reflexives
are commonly used in references to the leading subject, ..."
5. Grammar of the Latin Language ...: Adapted to Andrews and Stoddard's Latin by Ethan Allen Andrews, Solomon Stoddard (1837)
"In dependent clauses, in which the subject does not remain the same, the reflexives
commonly refer to the leading subject, when the thoughts, language, ..."
6. A Grammar of the Latin Language by Ethan Allen Andrews (1852)
"Id. reflexives. <§> 208. REM. 37. Sut and suus properly refer to the subject of
the proposition in which they stand ; as, ..."
7. A Grammar of the Latin Language: For the Use of Schools and Colleges by Ethan Allen Andrews, Solomon Stoddard (1848)
"In dependent clauses, in which the subject does not remain the same, the reflexives
commonly refer to the leading subject, when the thoughts, language, ..."
8. A Grammar of the Latin Language: For the Use of Schools and Colleges by Ethan Allen Andrews, Solomon Stoddard (1845)
"In dependent clauses, in which the subject does not remain the same, the reflexives
commonly refer to the leading subject, when the thoughts, language, ..."