It runs well
Well it depends on what what the word safe is doing in the sentence.
Acutally, it is an intransitive verb which needs a 'helping verb' such as have.......... A sentence using the word 'swum' could be: "I've swum to the island every day." The "'ve" stands for "have," a helping verb
The word "ran" is an intransitive verb. Intransitive verbs do not have a direct object, and may be followed by an adverb.
An intransitive verb is simply defined as a verbthat does not take a direct object. There's no word in the sentence that tells who or what received the action.So use would be a transitive verb because we always say -- I use (something) - there must be an object to complete the sentence.
Intransitive verbs do not have an object. The doctors are studying pain and other intransitive bodily sensations. (Here the word, like the verbs, means not related directly to a objective sensation --warmth, pressure -- but completely subjective, because it can be localized but not objectivized.)
You can use "can" in a sentence as a noun or a intransitive verb. A example of can in a sentence is "The can is purple". That example is a example of can as a noun. A example of a intransitive verb is "I can use a bottle to squirt was a things". The word "can" is a homonym. A homonym is a word that has the same spelling (or different spelling but same sound) as another, but has a different meaning or origan.
It is a verb; specifically, an intransitive verb;
verb = reads subject = she
The word "drive" can be both transitive and intransitive. As a transitive verb, it takes a direct object (e.g., "She drives a car"). As an intransitive verb, it does not require a direct object (e.g., "She drives carefully").
A verb is an action word; it propels the sentence; The boy runs down the hill. "runs" is the verb.
Depending on context, Rain can be an intransitive verb or transitive verb.
Transitive verbs require a direct object to make sense in a sentence, while intransitive verbs do not have a direct object. For example, "She is reading a book" is transitive (reading requires an object - book), while "She sleeps peacefully" is intransitive (sleeping does not require an object).