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Transitive verbs perform an action on something. This is called the 'direct object' of the verb.
Intransitive verbs may have an indirect object.
The indirect object is the person or thing for whom the action was performed.
Transitive Examples
Intransitive Examples
Tell and SpeakSpeak to him. (Speaking focuses on the action from the point of view of the speaker. Tell him (Tell focuses much more on the action of informing the other person..Some verbs with transitive and intransitive formsTo balance
To protest
This verb is usually intransitive. Eg: I protested against that decision. (I protesed but did not perform an action on the decision)
It can also have transitive forms.
He protested his innocence "I'm innocent!!" - Here the innocence is having something done to it and is the
direct object of the protest. We could say that the protest was aimed at his innocence.
Depending on the type of object they take, verbs may be transitive, intransitive, or linking. The meaning of a transitive verb is incomplete without a direct object, although the direct object may be implied but not stated. Lets look at some examples: AmE, permits "protest" as a transitive verb in sentences such as "She protested the cuts". In English we would use contested this way because if you contest something, you direct the action at that direct object, in this case the cuts, but if you protest against the cuts the cuts dont have the feeling of having any action performed on them.
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A TRANSITIVE verb is an action verb. It is usually followed by a word or phrase which answers the questions: WHOM?
WHAT?
An INTRANSITIVE verb is an action verb. It is usually followed by a word or phrase which answers the questions: WHY? WHEN? WHERE? or HOW? Transitive verbs (Marked as [T]
take a direct object. (usually an object immediatly after the verb) Intransitive verbs relate to prepositionsIntransitive verbs usually have a preposition which follows the verb and precedes the object. Check the common verb / preposition pairs.
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