The second verb "left" in the sentence is transitive because it has a direct object, which is "the restaurant."
The sentence "Dara grew impatient and angrily left the restaurant" is intransitive because the verb "left" does not take a direct object.
The second verb - left - is transitive. 'the restaurant' is a direct object.
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.
Ate is intransitive in that sentence. There is no direct object."You ate pizza in the cafeteria" is an example of ate as a transitive verb (pizza is the direct object).
The verb "was" in this sentence is intransitive because it does not take a direct object.
The second verb - left - is transitive. 'the restaurant' is a direct object.
The second verb - left - is transitive. 'the restaurant' is a direct object.
The second verb - left - is transitive. 'the restaurant' is a direct object.
In the sentence, Dara became impatient and left the restaurant, there are two verbs, became and left. Left is the more active of the two verbs. One might argue that becoming impatient is not actually an action. Become is a state verb.
You need a context to determine whether "ran" is transitive or intransitive. It is intransitive in the sentence, "She ran all the way home." It is transitive in the sentence, "He ran the business after his father died."
transitive
transitive yo
its intransitive because there is no object in the sentence
Sometimes he misses the ball.
transitive
transitive
In this sentence stand is intransitive.