I don't think so, unless you use it in past perfect tense.
Yes, cough is a verb. It can be used transitively or intransitively. It can also be used as a noun.
An ambitransitive is a verb which is able to be used transitively or intransitively without requiring morphological change.
"Like" can be both a transitive and intransitive verb. As a transitive verb, it can take an object, such as "I like cats." Intransitively, it can be used without an object, as in "I like to swim."
No. "continued" is active voice; its subject is rain. The verb is used intransitively, i.e it does not take a direct object.
Underline the verb in each sentence? A governess raises a child in a private home.
committed
Underline the verb in each sentence? A governess raises a child in a private home.
You can either use italics or an underline.
It depends. If heal is meant intransitively, i.e. "She healed in the hospital", the verb is Shafa (شفى) If heal is meant transitively, i.e. "I healed the monkey by bandaging its wounds", the verb is 3aaleja (عالج)
underline
Manifest is a TRANSITIVE verb - and not an intransitive verb. You can say - "The patient is manifesting the symptoms of Ebola." You CANNOT say "Ebola manifests in the patient." YUCK! You could say "Ebola manifests itself in the patient", i.e. you can use manifest reflexively - since the reflexive pronoun is really the object of the TRANSITIVE verb manifest. But FAR TOO MANY IDIOTS try to sound intelligent by using manifest intransitively!
the French verb 'souligner' means 'to underline' in English.