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Intransitive Verbs

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Learn Intransitive Verbs in English and practice using verbs that do not take a direct object in clear, natural sentences.

An intransitive verb does not take a direct object. The sentence can be complete with only the subject and the verb, or with other parts such as time, place, or manner. The action or state does not pass directly to a person or thing.

A sentence with an intransitive verb is complete without a direct object. Extra words may follow the verb, but they do not act as direct objects. They often show where, when, or how something happens.

Rule
An intransitive verb can end the main idea by itself โœ….
A word or phrase after the verb may give more information about place or time ๐Ÿ“.
A preposition before a noun often shows that the noun is not a direct object ๐Ÿ”—.

A transitive verb usually needs a direct object to complete its meaning. This difference helps you identify intransitive verbs. If the verb cannot take a direct object in that meaning, it is intransitive.

Rule
A transitive verb points directly to a person or thing ๐ŸŽฏ.
An intransitive verb does not point directly to an object ๐Ÿšซ.
The same sentence pattern does not work for every verb because verbs differ in meaning ๐Ÿ”.

Some verbs can be transitive in one use and intransitive in another use. The meaning often changes with the pattern. Native speakers may also differ on some uses by dialect or style, so it is better to check the meaning in the full sentence.

Word or PhraseDefinition
๐Ÿ”“openThis verb is intransitive when something opens by itself, and transitive when someone opens something.
๐Ÿ’ฅbreakThis verb is intransitive when something breaks, and transitive when someone breaks something.
๐Ÿ”„changeThis verb can be intransitive when a person or thing becomes different, and transitive when someone changes something.
๐ŸššmoveThis verb can be intransitive when a person or thing changes position, and transitive when someone moves something.

Many everyday verbs are often intransitive. They describe actions or states that do not need a direct object. Some of them can still appear with other sentence parts, but those parts are not direct objects.

Word or PhraseDefinition
โœˆ๏ธarriveThis verb means to reach a place, and it does not normally take a direct object.
๐Ÿ˜ดsleepThis verb describes a state of rest, and it does not need a direct object.
๐Ÿ˜‚laughThis verb describes a reaction, and it does not usually take a direct object.
๐ŸšถgoThis verb shows movement from one place to another, and it does not take a direct object in its basic use.
โฐhappenThis verb describes an event, and it does not take a direct object.

You can now identify an intransitive verb by checking whether it takes a direct object. You can also see when a sentence is complete without an object and when extra words after the verb have another job. You also know that some verbs can be both transitive and intransitive, depending on meaning, usage, and sometimes dialect or style.

All content was written by our AI and may contain a few mistakes. รšltima atualizaรงรฃo: Sat Mar 21, 2026, 2:04 AM