am is a be verb.
The present be verbs are:
am -- I am hungry
is -- He is hungry. She is hungry. It is hungry
are -- They are hungry. We are hungry. You are hungry.
The past be verbs are:
was -- I/he/she/it was hungry
were -- They/we/you were hungry.
Transitive and also an Action Verb
The word "transitive" is not a verb, it's an adjective. A transitive verb is an action verb that has a direct object.
Transitive Verb.
A transitive verb is the verb used when the subject of the sentence is the one doing the action; the direct object is the recipient of the action word. for example: The boy throws the ball. Throws is the verb and ball is the object.
A transitive verb is an action verb that has an object that receives the action. In this case, the object CD player does not receive the action sounds, so the verb is intransitive.
Transitive and also an Action Verb
The word "transitive" is not a verb, it's an adjective. A transitive verb is an action verb that has a direct object.
Transitive Verb.
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.
The Transitive verb in this sentence is struck.
A Transitive Verb
Yes
By definition, a "transitive" verb (one that has an object) must be an action verb.
"Like" can serve as both an action verb and a linking verb. As an action verb, it can express preferences or fondness (e.g., "I like chocolate"). As a linking verb, it can connect the subject to a subject complement (e.g., "She looks like her sister").
transitive linking
A transitive verb is the verb used when the subject of the sentence is the one doing the action; the direct object is the recipient of the action word. for example: The boy throws the ball. Throws is the verb and ball is the object.
A transitive verb.