Transitive and Intransitive Verbs
Transitive and Intransitive Verbs
TRANSITIVE VERBS
I bought.
Because BOUGHT (the past of buy) is a transitive verb and a transitive verb needs an object
after it to complete the sentence. The object after a transitive verb can be a noun or a pronoun.
I bought a car.
Now the sentence is complete and we can understand it. We added the object “a car” after the
verb.
If someone says:
You probably think … She likes WHAT? (What does she like?)
Like is a transitive verb so we need an object after the verb.
She likes chocolate.
Now we know what she likes so this sentence is complete and correct.
I invited Angelica.
You cannot just say I invited because the sentence is incomplete. The person who is listening
would probably ask “Whom did you invite?” So we need an object (in this case a person) after
the transitive verb invite.
I cut my finger.
You cannot just say I cut because the sentence is incomplete. The person who is listening
would probably ask “Cut what?”
Cut is a transitive verb because you need to cut something (an object, a thing).
We need to say WHAT the man stole in order to understand the sentence/situation. Steal (stole
is the past tense of steal) is a transitive verb. The object in this sentence is the bike.
The subject is doing the action of the verb and nothing receives the action. An intransitive verb
does not pass the action to an object.
He arrived.
The same rules apply to intransitive phrasal verbs. You cannot have an object after an
intransitive phrasal verb.
Sometimes the meaning changes depending on whether the verb is transitive or intransitive
He runs along the beach every morning (intransitive: run – the action/sport)
He runs a small grocery store (transitive: run = manage)
The plane will take off in five minutes. (intransitive: take off = to leave the ground and
begin to fly)
Please take off your shoes before entering the house. (transitive: take off = to remove
something)
(transitive) - (intransitive)
A good dictionary will tell you whether a verb is transitive (usually vt. or tr. next to the verb in
dictionaries) or intransitive (vi. or intr.)