Thank you so much! This was very simple and easy to understand. Came here after trying to conquer the correct usage of "to lay" vs "to lie." It seems lay is mostly used in transitive situations (e.g.: The hens lay eggs.) Lie is mostly used in intransitive situations ( e.g.: The lions lie in wait.) Lay is to place something down, whereas lie is to relax or recline. I've got the conjugation down except for the past participles. It's a bit tricky! Lie becomes lay in past tense, and lain is the past participle of lie. E.g., The lions _lay_ in wait all day. vs. The hens _laid_ eggs yesterday morning. The lions _had lain_ in wait all day. vs. The hens _had laid_ eggs every day.
After a few years of studying french, I finally decided I should learn this. I hear verbs are transitive or intransitive a lot in books and lesson videos, and see this in the dictionary. Actually not as complicated as I thought for some reason.
I want to thank you so much 🙏 I have an upcoming tedt in a day and you have really helped me a lot, I understood you more than my teacher. Really really grateful, you explain it really well
Love you 2 respected sir 🥰, you are a good teacher, i have never seen such a soft and soomthly teacher, you are showing tootaly your love on studants 🥰 while teaching,
30 days are left for exams is this correct sentence or 30 days to be left for exams or have only 30 days left for exams which is correct one among these
So, If the transitive verb transfers the action, how about ditransitive and complex transitive? Do ditransitive verb transfer action twice (to both objects, direct and indirect)? What about complex transitive? thanks
in Sentence (you promised to take us home.) verb is transitive or intransitive? Main verb is promised, (to take us home)is direct object?us or home is object? .plz explain
"I am doing something directly *to* the hotdog." **SNORT** And just like that, I went from "respectful & judiciously enlightened 32yo Navy wife/mom" to "giggling & immature brace-faced 14yo little brat", with a mind so far *in* the gutter, it actually has to *pay the gutter* rent! 😜
Wait. In the last segment , you put sentences with transitive verbs under intransitive verb head line. It’s confusing.. . I run a school. Is it a transitive verb or intransitive ?
How the word is used determines whether it is transitive or intransitive. This is why a word like "run" may be transitive in one sentence and transitive in another sentence. In the last segment, those are words that are often used as intransitive verbs but in those sentences, they are transitive. Intransitive: I run often. (In this sentence, there is no object.) Transitive: I run a school. (In this sentence, there is an object. I run something. I run a school.) In these two examples the word "run" is used differently. In the first sentence, "run" is the physical activity of running with my legs. In the second sentence, "run" is used to mean "lead." Remember that you cannot tell if a word is a transitive or intransitive verb without analyzing how it is used in a sentence.
I'll give you a thumbs up....but only just! You over-talked the '3rd' section; Intransitive verbs??? Better to have two parallel columns labelled Transitive and Intransitive.
No, some verbs always need an object. For example, 'find', 'look at', 'resemble'... I can't think of a grammatical sentence with one of those without an object.
They bought new equipment.....Transitive Larry tripped over a rock..... intransitive When asked the question what you get an answer so why is it that the second example is intransitive?
Thank you so much! This was very simple and easy to understand. Came here after trying to conquer the correct usage of "to lay" vs "to lie." It seems lay is mostly used in transitive situations (e.g.: The hens lay eggs.) Lie is mostly used in intransitive situations ( e.g.: The lions lie in wait.) Lay is to place something down, whereas lie is to relax or recline.
I've got the conjugation down except for the past participles. It's a bit tricky! Lie becomes lay in past tense, and lain is the past participle of lie.
E.g., The lions _lay_ in wait all day. vs. The hens _laid_ eggs yesterday morning.
The lions _had lain_ in wait all day. vs. The hens _had laid_ eggs every day.
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After a few years of studying french, I finally decided I should learn this. I hear verbs are transitive or intransitive a lot in books and lesson videos, and see this in the dictionary. Actually not as complicated as I thought for some reason.
You are awesome i understood perfectly well
I'm very glad you understood, it means I succeeded.
The man is good that means is beckylynch😘
agree
Thank you for you time and for your video. I learned something today that will help in my Bible studies. Thank you .
Best teacher 👩🏫
Great, now I want a hotdog, haha. Good lesson.
Gr8 video IM SUBSCRIBING !!!
My sugestion for transitive verb: Just remember what the transitive verb acts 'To what' or to ' Who's ' does the TrV acts for.
I want to thank you so much 🙏 I have an upcoming tedt in a day and you have really helped me a lot, I understood you more than my teacher. Really really grateful, you explain it really well
very useful video , Keep it up! Sir
Very helpful
Extremely helpful!
I like your teaching
Thank you, sir. This was very helpful for me. I understood clearly.
nice explanation
excellent.
It was very helpful thx
I'm glad it was helpful to you. Feel free to share the video with anyone who you think will like it.
Glad it helped!
Excellent 👍
Thanks.
Love the class here in 2022 and I have an English exam tomorrow
Explanation: 10/10
You are a good teacher. No doubt in that. You deserve more views and followers.
I love this video, it makes me understand easily. thanks a lot.
Great to have your lecture
Thank you so much! You’re awesome
Thank you for your video. I really liked the sound of birds 😊😊😊🐦
I did not even know their were birds entail I red this🦜🐦🦉🦚🐥
ikr me too that was calming
fantastic teaching style! Hopeful to get more and more similar videos having easy strategies
Thank you... I was preparing for my english exams🙏😌
great
i wish you were my ela teacher this video helped me so much
Love you 2 respected sir 🥰, you are a good teacher, i have never seen such a soft and soomthly teacher, you are showing tootaly your love on studants 🥰 while teaching,
I understood all videos, thanku sir, 🥰 thanku for making video on youtub.
Your teaching action, method is good studants can understand easily 👍
A SHORT TIP
Transitive Verbs always answer the who or what questions.
Example: She walks her dog.
she walks WHAT? Her dog
I love you.
I love WHO? You
Clean cut explaination. Thanks.
Thanks teacher
I got to understand thank you sir
U the best
You are a amazing teacher. Thank you
Great explanation, and it is clear you are a good man.
You are really awsome!
Thank you so much Sir..👍,
Thank you for helping me for my English exams
Hi! I have a question, do you think that the verb "to borrow" as in "to borrow something from someone" is a di- transitive verb? Thanks!
Thx now i understand 😊
Really good explanation.
This video helped me a lot thanks for uploading it
It was helpful
Excelllent Sir
This helped a lot. thx
Great explanation
❤❤
Thank sir so much. I have a question
She launched at me.
Sir this is transitive or intransitive????
❤
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Thank you so much ❤️
Excellent sir !
Wow masha allah sir
30 days are left for exams is this correct sentence or 30 days to be left for exams or have only 30 days left for exams which is correct one among these
Thank u so much ♥ it really helped me ♥♥
Wow.. got it.thanks
Thank you
So,
If the transitive verb transfers the action, how about ditransitive and complex transitive?
Do ditransitive verb transfer action twice (to both objects, direct and indirect)?
What about complex transitive?
thanks
♥️ best vid on this topic
Thanks
helped a lot
when a 9 minute video is better than your teachers 1 hour explanation
Tricky Situations - thanks.
Thank you very much sir I understood perfectly
Stay blessed
1:26 first time I’ve heard that one in a while 🥲
1:33 not the first time I’ve said that one in a while
Tqs
Thanks you so much, you explain very well
well explained
Meera moved the bed towards the wall which sentence is this
Great way of explaining.
If it is intransitive there is no passive form then why using left in future advanced passive.
I’m first wow lol
Congrats.
Not anymore
@@itskaylacadogan4528 lol
Please make video this topic .Imperative passive voice,advice,request,order.
I was searching and I found many people but I couldn't understand but because of ui COULD understand
Thank you so much sir
Thank you thank you so much
in Sentence (you promised to take us home.) verb is transitive or intransitive? Main verb is promised, (to take us home)is direct object?us or home is object? .plz explain
Thank you sir
1:27 I love you too 🥺❤️
sir .tell me how resemble is a transitive verb explain
'I resemble my dad'
'A crocodile resembles an alligator'
I think 'resemble' is always transitive. I can't think of a way to use it without an object.
👍👍
like my teacher gives me a 2 line sentence and asks me is the verb transitive or intransitive
I going to subscribe to the channel right now >:v
Thanks!
"I am doing something directly *to* the hotdog."
**SNORT**
And just like that, I went from "respectful & judiciously enlightened 32yo Navy wife/mom" to "giggling & immature brace-faced 14yo little brat", with a mind so far *in* the gutter, it actually has to *pay the gutter* rent! 😜
Haha, 'have to pay the gutter rent,' funny! Thanks!
Thanx alot 😍
Birds fly in the sky. Is fly transitive or intransitive verb?
Intransitive verb
Intransitive
Wait. In the last segment , you put sentences with transitive verbs under intransitive verb head line. It’s confusing.. .
I run a school. Is it a transitive verb or intransitive ?
How the word is used determines whether it is transitive or intransitive. This is why a word like "run" may be transitive in one sentence and transitive in another sentence. In the last segment, those are words that are often used as intransitive verbs but in those sentences, they are transitive.
Intransitive:
I run often.
(In this sentence, there is no object.)
Transitive:
I run a school.
(In this sentence, there is an object. I run something. I run a school.)
In these two examples the word "run" is used differently. In the first sentence, "run" is the physical activity of running with my legs. In the second sentence, "run" is used to mean "lead."
Remember that you cannot tell if a word is a transitive or intransitive verb without analyzing how it is used in a sentence.
Tnx alot
I'll give you a thumbs up....but only just! You over-talked the '3rd' section; Intransitive verbs??? Better to have two parallel columns labelled Transitive and Intransitive.
Hey
Is it correct to say
It doesn't
Or it don't
It doesn't
Can all transitive verbs be intransitive??
No, some verbs always need an object. For example, 'find', 'look at', 'resemble'... I can't think of a grammatical sentence with one of those without an object.
Hello,I'm Kla
Just look at his actions
did you really took the word from hindi language
They bought new equipment.....Transitive
Larry tripped over a rock..... intransitive
When asked the question what you get an answer so why is it that the second example is intransitive?
Op