What Is An Intransitive Verb
What Is An Intransitive Verb
(with Examples)
An intransitive verb is one that does not take a direct object. In other words, it is
not done to someone or something. It only involves the subject.
The opposite of an intransitive verb is a transitive verb. A transitive verb can
have a direct object. For example:
He laughed.
(Laughed is an intransitive verb. It has no direct object. You cannot laugh
something.)
He told a joke.
(Told is a transitive verb. The direct object is a joke. You can tell something. You
can tell a story, a lie, a joke, etc.)
Remember, you can find the direct object of a verb by reading the verb and then
asking "what?" (or "whom?"). If this question is not appropriate, then you're
probably dealing with an intransitive verb. For example (verbs in bold):
(intransitive)
Intransitive Verb
Comment
to agree
to play
to run
to walk
to eat
to appear
to arrive
to belong
to collapse
to collide
to die
to demonstrate
to disappear
to emerge
to exist
to fall
to go
to happen
to laugh
to nest
to occur
to remain
to respond
to rise
to roost
to sit
to sleep
to stand
to vanish
As an intransitive verb cannot take a direct object, there is no passive form. For
example:
She fell.
(The verb fell (from to fall) is intransitive.)
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