I am going to delhi.change the voice
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i will be going to delhi
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‘Go’ is an intransitive verb, a verb which does not take objects.
‘I am going to Delhi’- There's no word in the sentence that tells who or what received the action.
‘To Delhi’ is neither the direct nor the indirect object of the verb ‘go’.
‘To Delhi’ is an ‘adverbial of direction’-a prepositional phrase used to talk about the direction.
“I am going to Delhi’, for all the reasons given above, has no passive form. Not under normal conditions, not even in bizarre, insane conditions; neither in formal language nor in informal, colloquial, everyday language.
‘Go’, sometimes, does show transitive characteristics- only in informal expressions, when the word has a totally different meaning. That is, ‘go’ is followed by a word or group of words which have the characteristics of an ‘object’-but only when ‘go’ doesn't mean ‘move from one place to another’. Even then, passive constructions are near impossible.
Consider another intransitive verb ‘laugh’, which when accompanied by preposition ‘at’, turns transitive. ‘The kids laughed at her’. ‘She was laughed at (by the kids)’.
‘I am going to Delhi’- There's no word in the sentence that tells who or what received the action.
‘To Delhi’ is neither the direct nor the indirect object of the verb ‘go’.
‘To Delhi’ is an ‘adverbial of direction’-a prepositional phrase used to talk about the direction.
“I am going to Delhi’, for all the reasons given above, has no passive form. Not under normal conditions, not even in bizarre, insane conditions; neither in formal language nor in informal, colloquial, everyday language.
‘Go’, sometimes, does show transitive characteristics- only in informal expressions, when the word has a totally different meaning. That is, ‘go’ is followed by a word or group of words which have the characteristics of an ‘object’-but only when ‘go’ doesn't mean ‘move from one place to another’. Even then, passive constructions are near impossible.
Consider another intransitive verb ‘laugh’, which when accompanied by preposition ‘at’, turns transitive. ‘The kids laughed at her’. ‘She was laughed at (by the kids)’.
ShanAgrawal:
thnq frnd
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