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Intransitive verb

In grammar, an intransitive verb is a verb that takes no object. Examples of intransitive verbs include:

See also transitive and ditransitive.

There are languages that mark verbs for their transitivity, such that the verb in "I ate" and "I ate a fish" would have different affixes. In addition, ergative verbs generally take complementizers, while normal intransitive verbs can take prepositional phrases. Thus:

But not

 

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Intransitive verb

 

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