Answer:
1. hers - possessive, singular
2. I - personal, singular
3. herself - intensive, singular
4. you - personal, singular
5. ourselves - intensive, plural
6. his - possessive, singular
7. they - personal, plural
8. herself - reflexive, singular
9. their - possessive, plural
10. yourselves - intensive, plural
11. them - personal, plural
12. themselves - reflexive, plural
Explanation:
- Personal pronouns are associated with grammatical persons - first person, second person, and third person - according to who the speaker is, who he or she is talking to, and who he or she is talking about. Personal pronouns can function as subjects of a sentence - I, you, he, she, it, we, they - or as objects - me, you, him, her, it, us, them.
- Possessive pronouns are used to indicate that something belongs to someone. As a matter of fact, they are only pronouns when they substitute a noun mentioned in the sentence or in the conversation as a whole - mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs. If they accompany the noun instead of substituting it, they are possessive adjectives - my, your, his, her, its, our, their.
- Reflexive pronouns and intensive pronouns look exactly the same: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, and themselves. The difference lies in the way they are employed. Reflexive pronouns indicate the performer and the receiver of the action are the same person. Example: I accidentally cut myself with the knife - "I" performed the action of cutting and "I" also received it. Intensive pronouns are used for emphasis: The President himself talked to me - It was the President, not someone else, and he is quite an important person.