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The reflexive pronoun can never be the subject of a sentence. It can only be used as an object (direct on indirect) or combined with a preposition to form an adverbial complement. It replaces a regular personal pronoun when the sentence's subject and it's object or adverbial complement both reffer to the same person or thing. It could be roughly translated as self.
The reflexive pronoun doesn't have a Nominative and a Vocative form. It has one set of forms for all the grammatical numbers, genders and persons.
G | sebje, so |
D | sebi, sej |
A | sebje, so |
I | (ze) sobu |
L | (w) sebi |
The longer variants of the Gen., Dat. and Acc. forms are only used after prepositions and in combination with the emphatic pronoun sam alone.
The reflexive never appears in the position of a sentence's subject. It is used instead of a presonal pronoun when stands for the same dessiganate (same person, animal, thing or phenomenon) as the sentence's subject does.
Móžeš | sej | pomhać. |
can 2.sing.pres. | self Dat. | help infinitive |
verb | indirect object | direct object |
You can help yourself. |
Měj | k | sebi | dowěru. |
have 2.sing.imperat. | to | self Dat. | trust Acc.sing.fem. |
verb | adverbial | direct object | |
Trust yourself. |
In the examples above the subject and the indirect object or the adverbial reffer to the same person: you (sing.), thus the reflexive pronoun must be used for the indirect object or the adverbial instead of a regular personal pronoun. Compare the below sentences with different arguments:
Móžeš | mi | pomhać. |
can 2.sing.pres. | I Dat.sing. | help infinitive |
verb | indirect object | direct object |
You can help me. |
Měj | ke | mni | dowěru. |
have 2.sing.imperat. | to | I Dat. | trust Acc.sing.fem. |
verb | adverbial | direct object | |
Trust me. |
This time, as the subject and the indirect object or the adverbial reffer to two different persons (you (sing.) vs. I), the indirect object and the adverbial are expressed with a regular personal pronoun.