Count: 0 — No attested English pronouns begin with the letter K. This list follows strict criteria: include only genuine, well-documented English pronouns in standard classes (personal, possessive, reflexive, relative, demonstrative, interrogative, indefinite, reciprocal, distributive). Note an interesting detail: some other languages and ancient roots favor k- interrogatives, but English pronoun forms developed along different sound and morphological paths.
Understand why the criteria yield no results. Pronouns form a closed grammatical class that descends from Old English and Proto-Germanic sources; those historical forms produced pronouns starting with sounds like w-, h-, t-, s-, n-, m- and y-, not k-. Major references (Oxford English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Cambridge Grammar) and large corpora show no standard English pronouns beginning with K. Treat the absence as a product of historical sound change and the closed nature of the pronoun system, not a gap in listing.
Consider items that come close. Some recent neopronouns—coinages such as ke/kir—appear in online use, but they remain nonstandard and are not yet recorded in major dictionaries or traditional grammar references. Words that start with K in English (for example kin, kith) are nouns or other word classes, not pronouns. Consult standard grammars and dictionary entries for full A–Z coverage, and check related pronoun pages for letters that do yield many entries (for example W, T, S, and I).