transitive A+
No. It is used as an adjective or a transitive verb. An adverb form is "readily."
Since flow does not take an object, it is an intransitive verb.
The function of a noun that follows a transitive verb is the direct object or indirect object. For example: John gave flowers to Mary. (the noun flowers is the direct object) John gave Mary some flowers. (the noun Mary is the indirect object)
Can is; a noun: Put the worms in the can and lets go to the lake. a modal auxiliary verb: I can type very fast. a transitive verb: We want to can all those tomatoes tonight.
transitive
transitive
transitive
transitive transitive
Transitive
Transitive
Transitive nouns don't exist. There are, however, transitive verbs. Transitive verbs must have a direct object. For example, "holds" is a transitive verb because it requires a direct object. "She holds" is not a complete thought, but "she holds flowers" is.
transitive
Chirped is transitive
transitive
checkers is the direct object so play is transitive
transitive