Dutch personal pronouns have subject (nominative) and object (accusative/dative) forms. Subject forms: ik (I), jij/je (you informal), u (you formal), hij/ze/het (he/she/it), wij/we (we), jullie (you plural), zij/ze (they). Object forms: mij/me (me), jou/je (you), u (you formal), hem/haar/het (him/her/it), ons (us), jullie (you plural), hen/hun/ze (them). The je/jij distinction: je is unstressed, jij is stressed or for emphasis.
Reflexive pronouns are used when subject and object are the same: me (myself — with ik), je (yourself — with jij/u), zich (himself/herself/itself/themselves — with hij/zij/het/zij plural), ons (ourselves — with wij). Common reflexive verbs: zich wassen (to wash oneself), zich voelen (to feel), zich vergissen (to be mistaken), zich herinneren (to remember), zich schamen (to be ashamed). U uses zich as its reflexive.
Demonstrative pronouns: deze (this/these — for de-words), dit (this — for het-words), die (that/those — for de-words), dat (that — for het-words). Deze auto is nieuw (this car is new), Dit huis is oud (this house is old), Die man werkt hier (that man works here), Dat kind slaapt (that child is sleeping). These also function as demonstrative adjectives before nouns. The choice deze/dit and die/dat follows the same de/het gender system.