Example sentneces:
Adverbs aren't transitive or intransitive. Transitive is an action verb that takes a direct object; intransitive is an action verb that does not take a direct object.
Yes. Any verb that takes a direct object is a transitive verb (as in: Lady GaGa HAS a ________).
For a verb to be transitive it must have a subject and an object. In order to make "moved" a transitive verb, the sentence would have to begin with a subject who did the moving and end with an object that was moved by the subject.
if it is answering a question who or what and has an object.
Transitive, the direct object is tomatoes.
There are transitive verbs, if that's what you mean. Depending on the type of object they take, verbs may be transitive, intransitive or linking. The meaning of a transitive verb is incomplete with a direct object, as in the following examples: Incomplete: The shelf holds. Complete: The shelf holds three book and one vase.
She (subject) watched (transitive verb) the movie (direct object). They (subject) cooked (transitive verb) dinner (direct object). He (subject) read (transitive verb) the book (direct object). The students (subject) completed (transitive verb) the assignment (direct object).
Yes, both transitive active and passive verbs have a subject or object as the action receiver. The only difference is that transitive passive has a subject receiving action while the transitive active has an object receiving action.
give 5 sentences of direst object
yes
This is not really a sentence. It has a passive verb phrase an actor but no non-actor or subject. Passive sentences usually require a verb that takes an object - a transitive verb. So I would say bake is a transitive verb. Some verbs can be both transitive or non transitive. The bread was baked by mother.
Yes, they do. Over 90 per cent of all English sentences fall into one of the following six patterns:Subject - intransitive verbSubject - transitive verb - direct objectSubject - linking verb - complementSubject - linking verb - predicate adverbSubject - transitive verb - indirect object - direct objectSubject - transitive verb - direct object - objective complementFor more information, go to EzineArticles.com and enter STUDY ITS BONES in the search box. Author: Gary Jacobsen.
The word "transitive" is not a verb, it's an adjective. A transitive verb is an action verb that has a direct object.
predicate = crashed his car (= what comes after the subject) verb (crashed) is transitive (it takes an object) this is not the right answers
A transitive verb with a direct object is in the active voice.
checkers is the direct object so play is transitive
Adverbs aren't transitive or intransitive. Transitive is an action verb that takes a direct object; intransitive is an action verb that does not take a direct object.