Told is an intransitive verb because it doesn't travel from one place to another.
The verb "told" is transitive. It requires a direct object to complete its meaning. For example, in the sentence "She told a story," the noun phrase "a story" is the direct object of the verb "told."
The verb "to sing" can be both transitive and intransitive depending on the context. When the verb is used without an object, it is considered intransitive (e.g., "She sings beautifully"). When the verb is followed by a direct object (e.g., "She sings a song"), it is considered transitive.
Chirped is transitive
The only verb in the sentence, "Yesterday you went to the mall", is intransitive. (The verb is "went".)
Nouns are not transitive or intransitive, that is a form for verbs.A transitive verb takes a direct object:Jake ate his dinner. He can have his dessert.An intransitive verb has no direct object:Mary is driving. She will come soon. (soon is an adverb modifying the verb come)
Works is an intransitive verb in that example. There is no direct object.
To fell a tree = transitive I fell = intransitive
The verb "to sing" can be both transitive and intransitive depending on the context. When the verb is used without an object, it is considered intransitive (e.g., "She sings beautifully"). When the verb is followed by a direct object (e.g., "She sings a song"), it is considered transitive.
transitive
Transitive
The verb 'questioned' can be transitive or intransitive. Examples: Transitive: I was questioned endlessly. Intransitive: I questioned the veracity of the his excuse.
No, it is a helping verb, and those cannot be transitive or intransitive.
The verb was is intransitive.
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.
It can be used as both a transitive and intransitive verb.
transitive
Chirped is transitive
It can be both intransitive and transitive. "The wind is blowing" is intransitive. "I'm blowing him a kiss" is transitive.