It is a verb phrase where the verb does not take an object.
Jeromy will eat until noon. (eat has no object)
The phrase "he loyal fights for his king" is grammatically incorrect. It seems to be a mix of two ideas: "He fights for his king" (transitive) and "He is loyal" (intransitive). If you want to combine them, you can say "He is loyal and fights for his king" to maintain clarity.
Told is an intransitive verb because it doesn't travel from one place to another.
The sentence "The dog jumped into the stream" contains a transitive verb ("jumped") because it has a direct object ("stream").
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.
The verb "was" in this sentence is intransitive because it does not take a direct object.
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The phrase "he loyal fights for his king" is grammatically incorrect. It seems to be a mix of two ideas: "He fights for his king" (transitive) and "He is loyal" (intransitive). If you want to combine them, you can say "He is loyal and fights for his king" to maintain clarity.
Well it depends on what what the word safe is doing in the sentence.
In the sentence "Yesterday we went to the mall," the verb "went" is intransitive. It does not take a direct object; instead, it describes the action of the subject ("we") without transferring the action to an object. The phrase "to the mall" serves as a prepositional phrase indicating the destination.
There is no passive of the phrase do or die. Moreover, there is no passive of to die, as the verb is always intransitive: that is, it cannot have an object.
its intransitive because there is no object in the sentence
intransitive
The phrase "Steve grows taller each year" contains an intransitive verb. Intransitive verbs do not require a direct object to complete their meaning, and in this case, "grows" stands alone without needing an object to convey the idea that Steve's height increases over time.
This is not really a sentence. It has a passive verb phrase an actor but no non-actor or subject. Passive sentences usually require a verb that takes an object - a transitive verb. So I would say bake is a transitive verb. Some verbs can be both transitive or non transitive. The bread was baked by mother.
To make the verb "pushed" intransitive in the sentence "the soldiers pushed," you could end the sentence with a phrase that does not require a direct object. For example, "the soldiers pushed forward" or "the soldiers pushed against the wind." In these cases, "pushed" does not act on a direct object, thus making it intransitive.
INTRANSITIVE. Ex Turned ON
It can be both intransitive and transitive. "The wind is blowing" is intransitive. "I'm blowing him a kiss" is transitive.