The verb "is" in this sentence is intransitive because it does not have a direct object receiving the action. Instead, it links the subject ("Sally") to the subject complement ("very patient with her pesky little brother").
Yes, the sentence is transitive. It has a subject (Sally), a verb (is), and an object (her pesky little brother).
"Little brother" in Welsh is "brawd bach."
"Little brother" in Thai is pronounced as "น้องชาย" (nóng chaai).
The Hawaiian translation of little brother is "hiapo."
In Farsi, you say "برادر کوچک" (baradar kuchak) to refer to a little brother.
INTRANSITIVE
Yes, the sentence is transitive. It has a subject (Sally), a verb (is), and an object (her pesky little brother).
The verb "is" is a linking verb.A linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object of a linking verb restates the subject of the sentence.Sally = patientThe object of a linking verb is called a subject complement; a noun, pronoun, or adjective that the subject is or becomes.The subject complement "patient" is a predicate adjective.A noun or pronoun subject complement is a predicate nominative.
"Long" is an adjective, not a verb. To figure out if a verb is transitive or intransitive use a direct object to test it. If you can abutt a direct object to a verb without a preposition it is transitive. If not it is intransitive. I buy a school. (Makes sense, a little unorthodox but OK, "buy" is transitive.) I come a school. (Makes no sense, "come" needs prepositions like "to" or "from".)
racimo, grupo (noun) arracimarse, agruparse (verb, intransitive) apinar, amontonar (verb, transitive. The 'n' in 'apinar' has a tilde, the little wave)
Noun: I have little trust. Noun: She put her wealth into a trust. Noun: I opened a trust in your name. Verb, transitive: Trust no future, however bright. Verb, transitive: I trust you. Verb, intransitive: He could never learn to trust.
Afford is a transitive verb. Without an object, this sentence makes little sense.
'little brother' = hermanito
The little brother is Doodle.
Abel was this first little brother. His brother's name was Cain.
Cuddle can be a verb (transitive or intransitive) or a noun. Here are some example sentences: One of my cats likes to cuddle, but the other does not like such close contact. Little children like to cuddle stuffed animals. Karen just wanted a cuddle, but her boyfriend had other ideas.
he has a little brother? since when...