Work is an intransitive verb, these verbs have two characteristics. It is an action verb expressing an activity such as 'arrive, go, sit' and so on. Secondly, it will not have a direct object receiving the action.
Intransitive verb.
The verb form for "wind" is "to twist or turn in a spiral or coil." For example, "I need to wind the clock to make it work."
A transitive verb.
Transitive verb.
The verb of intensity is intensify. As in "to intensify something".
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.
The word "ran" is an intransitive verb. Intransitive verbs do not have a direct object, and may be followed by an adverb.
To fell a tree = transitive I fell = intransitive
Intransitive Verb.
Yes, went (past tense of go) is an intransitive verb.
The verb 'to jump' is intransitive. (A person does jump the ground, but jumps on the ground.)
In grammar, an intransitive verb does not take an object. In more technical terms, an intransitive verb has only one argument (its subject), and hence has a valency of one. For example, in English, the verbs sleep and die, are intransitive. ...
It is an intransitive verb.
no it is intransitive verb