1 / 9

Transitive and intransitive verbs

Transitive and intransitive verbs. Mrs. Stephanie Irizarry. A transitive verb is an action verb that sends its action to a noun or pronoun in the predicate. The receiver of the action is the direct object.

lutherj
Download Presentation

Transitive and intransitive verbs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Transitive and intransitive verbs Mrs. Stephanie Irizarry

  2. A transitive verb is an action verb that sends its action to a noun or pronoun in the predicate. The receiver of the action is the direct object. • An intransitive verbhas NO direct object. The same verb can be transitive in one sentence and intransitive in another. Some action verbs are always intransitive. They never have direct objects. Intransitive Verbs: Her eyes twinkled. Carl will listen to her carefully.

  3. Try it out: • Underline the verb or verb phrase. Write T for transitive verbs and INT for intransitive verbs. If the verb is transitive, circle the direct object. • 1. Ann’s family brought her birthday present. • 2. The watch’s colorful face gleams brightly. • 3. Amy wore her new watch to school. • 4. The second hand sweeps around the numbers. • 5. The numbers glow in the dark. • 6. They chose a watch with an orange band.

  4. ON YOUR OWN: • Underline the verb or verb phrase. Write T for transitive verbs and INT for intransitive verbs. If the verb is transitive, circle the direct object. • 1. We laughed at the joke about the flea. • 2. Maria explained the joke to them. • 3. Berto introduced a new joke to us. • 4. Will his sisters remember the rhyme? • 5. Mrs. Garcia chuckled very softly. • 6. She smiled at us. • 7. We delighted the Garcias with Granddad’s funny story. • 8. Everyone listened to the beautiful music. • 9. The applause surprised Maria. • 10. Then Mr. Garcia also played.

  5. Being verbs and linking verbs

  6. - Some verbs do not show action. They show what the subject is or is like. Verbs called being verbs show a state of being. • Mr. Wong became our principal. He seems kind. • - A being verb is often a linking verb . It links the subject of the sentence with a word in the predicate that tells more about it. • Mr. Wong feels happy. He had been a teacher for twenty years.

  7. - Linking verbs link the subject with a word in the predicate. The word can be a predicate noun or a predicate adjective. A predicate noun renames the subject. A predicate adjective describes the subject. • - Some verbs can be either linking verbs or action verbs.

  8. Try it out: • Underline the linking verb in each sentence. Circle the predicate noun or the predicate adjective. • 1. The Black Hills are really mountains. • 2. Thunderhead Mountain is part of the Black Hills. • 3. Someday the mountaintop will become a huge statue. • 4. The statue is rough now. • 5. The work on it seems slow. • 6. The statue will be a profile of Chief Crazy Horse.

  9. “ON YOUR OWN” • Underline the linking verb in each sentence. Circle the predicate noun or the predicate adjective. • 1. My aunt is the author of a comic strip. • 2. Her office is busy and colorful. • 3. Her special ink smells funny. • 4. The characters in her strip are animals. • 5. The history of comics seems exciting.

More Related