English, asked by jubin7, 1 year ago

he always keeps his money in a wallet .whether it is transitive or not

Answers

Answered by snigdha74
19

Q. He always keeps his money in a wallet.

A. Transitive verbs are action verbs that have an object to receive that action. In the sentence above, the direct object ‘money’ received the action of the verb ‘keep’.

So yes, it is a transitive verb.

Answered by pragyan07sl
1

Answer:

Yes, it is transitive.

Explanation:

  • Verbs are the drivers of language.
  • Transitive action words are action words that require at least one object.
  • It is subsequently vital to know the contrast between transitive and intransitive activity words.
  • A transitive action word requires an immediate item to complete its importance.
  • For example; She (subject) plays (transitive action word) violin. (direct object).
  • An intransitive action word doesn't need an immediate object to finish its importance.
  • For example; She (subject) snickers and grins (compound intransitive action word).
  • A transitive action word is one that is utilized with an object like a thing, expression, or pronoun that alludes to the individual or thing that is impacted by the activity of the action word.
  • In the given sentence, The verb "keeps" requires an object (his money in a wallet) to receive the action.
  • That means the direct object ‘money’ received the action of the verb ‘keep’.

Therefore in the given sentence, the verb "keeps" is transitive.

#SPJ3

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