duff
Depending on context, Rain can be an intransitive verb or transitive verb.
she swims nicely
Intransitive Verb.
A sentence with a subject, intransitive verb, and an adverb is:Lorelei complained bitterly.
The word bore is an action verb and a common noun. Examples: Verb: The subject will bore you to tears but the teacher will amuse you. Verb: We had to bore through bedrock to get to the water. Noun: That teacher is such a bore, it's hard to stay awake in class. Noun: The bore broke twice in the first hour of drilling.
The verb 'questioned' can be transitive or intransitive. Examples: Transitive: I was questioned endlessly. Intransitive: I questioned the veracity of the his excuse.
"People" is not an intransitive verb; it is actually a noun that refers to a group of individuals. Intransitive verbs do not take a direct object, while "people" does not function as a verb at all. Instead, verbs like "run" or "sleep" serve as examples of intransitive verbs.
S-IV shows the sentence pattern. S - IV means subject + intransitive verb. An intransitive verb is a verb with no direct object. egShe sings -- she = subject, sings = intransitive verbThey work -- They = subject, work = intransitive verbThe dog sleeps -- The dog = subject, sleeps = intransitive verb
A INTRANSITIVE VERB IS A VERB THAT DOES NOT REQUIRE A OBJECT !
No, it is a helping verb, and those cannot be transitive or intransitive.
The verb was is intransitive.
An intransitive verb is a verb that does not require an object to complete the sense. The cat purrs. The canary sings sweetly. The horse runs. The children laughed heartily. The steamer sails at noon.
The word "ran" is an intransitive verb. Intransitive verbs do not have a direct object, and may be followed by an adverb.
The verb "surprise" is normally, in modern English, a transitive verb; that is, it requires an object. Examples are "You really surprise me!" and "I will surprise you." It could, however used as an intransitive verb, that is, without the object: "Oh my, how you do like to surprise!" But this is much less common.
Yes, went (past tense of go) is an intransitive verb.
To fell a tree = transitive I fell = intransitive
Intransitive Verb.