Appendix:Middle English personal pronouns

Personal pronouns
The following is a table of Middle English personal pronouns. Due to wide dialectical variation and lack of standard orthography, many variations exist for each pronoun; those given here are variants that represent major formal classes. The modern equivalents of each are given in italics below.

Reflexive pronouns
Unlike in Modern English, where reflexive pronouns are consistently formed with the suffix -self appended to the genitive/possessive pronoun, a variety of strategies could be used to mark reflexivity in Middle English. The word could be appended to either the genitive or accusative (giving rise to the Modern English suffix), or used alone. Finally, much as in Old English, a pronoun can be used without any special marking for reflexivity.

Indefinite pronouns
There exist in Middle English as well several indefinite pronouns, corresponding to the Modern English or generic : the three main forms are,  and , each formed by phonetic reduction from the former.