• This tutorial aims to help you understand what transitive and intransitive verbs are, provide examples, and explain how to correctly use them in sentences.
  • Transitive verbs always require or demand an object to make complete sense, whereas intransitive verbs do not need any object to construct a complete sentence.
  • A verb can only be described as transitive or intransitive based on the requirement of the object that completes the thought or not.
  • 1) Say the subject and verb followed by the question “what?” or “whom?” 2a) The answer to the above question is the direct object. Therefore the verb is transitive.
  • Firstly, verbs are either intransitive and transitive. An intransitive verb is the opposite of a transitive verb: It doesn't require an object to act upon.
  • Transitive Verbs, in other words are action words that require an object in the sentence as the recipient of the action. For Example
  • Why is this sentence incomplete? Because NEED is a transitive verb and a transitive verb needs an object after it to complete the sentence.
  • Today we’ll explore one section of verbs in English called transitive and intransitive verbs. ... A transitive verb is a verb used with an object.
  • Transitive verbs are action verbs that have an object to receive that action. In the first sentence above, the direct object ball received the action of the verb hit.
  • In the case that a prepositional phrase alone acts like a or similar to an object, some grammar experts call that structure a pseudo-transitive.