English, asked by aditsarda4, 3 months ago

Which questions are used to differentiate between transitive and intransitive verbs​

Answers

Answered by tanishkamoruskar
3

Answer:

A verb can be described as transitive or intransitive based on whether it requires an object to express a complete thought or not. A transitive verb is one that only makes sense if it exerts its action on an object. An intransitive verb will make sense without one. Some verbs may be used both ways

Explanation:

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.

Transitive verb, according to the rule, requires subject+verb+object form and should answer the question "What" or "Whom", Therefore these sentences are all the transitive verbs, especially 'to be famous' is still the direct object(What do I want?

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Answered by XxZeeshanarshiALLHA
0

Answer:

verb can be described as transitive or intransitive based on whether it requires an object to express a complete thought or not. A transitive verb is one that only makes sense if it exerts its action on an object. An intransitive verb will make sense without one.

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