Since they also have the pronominal property of allowing split antecedents, Kartono (2013) and Volkova (2014, 2017) refer to them as half-reflexives or semi-reflexives, which is the term I will be using., Reflexive and Intensive Pronouns Pronouns that end in –self or –selves are either reflexive or intensive. Reflexive and intensive pronouns have the same forms but different uses., Reflexive Pronouns Reflexive pronouns are a bit different from the other kinds of pronouns. They cause the verb to reflect back on the subject. In other words, reflexive pronouns are used when the subject of the sentence is the same as the object of the verb of that sentence., Reflexive pronouns are often used when the object is the same as the subject. For example, in the sentence "she saw herself in the mirror", she and herself refer to the same person., Besides reflexives and pronouns, we will discuss elements such as verbal reciprocal and emphatic reflexives which has no independent reference of its own but rather dependent on an entity within (antecedent) or outside the sentence., It has been firmly held for the past number of decades (and, we would argue, without proper justification) that anaphors cannot take split antecedents..