His shoes were a mess after he stepped in the mud. She won the race after she stepped up her pace. He stepped up to the plate, swung the bat, and hit a home run. She stepped on the gas pedal and sped away. His parents were very proud of him after he stepped up to do the right thing by telling the truth.
you spell it like this Stepped. If you wanted to use it in a sentence then you could use it like this: I stepped up on the ladder.
There are transitive and intransitive verbs.
Indeed, the word "stepped" is spelt correctly in the question.
Stepped is a verb. It's the past tense of step.
The sentence "The dog jumped into the stream" contains a transitive verb ("jumped") because it has a direct object ("stream").
intransitive
The verb "cringed" can be both transitive and intransitive, depending on its usage in a sentence. For example, "He cringed at the sight of the spider" is transitive because it has a direct object ("the sight of the spider"), while "He cringed in embarrassment" is intransitive because it does not have a direct object.
INTRANSITIVE. Ex Turned ON
It can be both intransitive and transitive. "The wind is blowing" is intransitive. "I'm blowing him a kiss" is transitive.
Intransitive Recordings was created in 1997.
A INTRANSITIVE VERB IS A VERB THAT DOES NOT REQUIRE A OBJECT !
The word "ran" is an intransitive verb. Intransitive verbs do not have a direct object, and may be followed by an adverb.
The verb 'questioned' can be transitive or intransitive. Examples: Transitive: I was questioned endlessly. Intransitive: I questioned the veracity of the his excuse.
Originated is an intransitive verb.
No, it is a helping verb, and those cannot be transitive or intransitive.
Intransitive