In this context, reflexive and reciprocal pronouns ( such as " himself " and " each other " ) are referred to as anaphors ( in a specialized restricted sense ) rather than as pronominal elements.
22.
Although in many cases, either a reflexive or a reciprocal pronoun could appear in the same structural position, in some cases, the asymmetry occurs when a reciprocal may be bound to its antecedent, but a reflexive may not.
23.
While " elkaar " is a single morpheme that is equivalent to the English reciprocal pronoun " each other ", " mekaar " is equivalent to the English reciprocal pronoun " one another ".
24.
While " elkaar " is a single morpheme that is equivalent to the English reciprocal pronoun " each other ", " mekaar " is equivalent to the English reciprocal pronoun " one another ".
25.
There are no verbs that " only " occur in a reciprocal form, but those that can take the reciprocal pronoun " elkaar " ( each other ) also take " hebben " in the perfect, thus behaving like reflexive ones.
26.
:: Is it really, because I couldn't find it there, and not to mention that indefinite and reciprocal pronouns aren't [ neccesarily, I guess they can sometimes be ] personal pronouns so it would be an odd place to put it.