transitive
Intransitive
a sentence
Sentence
The correct sentence should be: Brian and I will be attending a seminar.
There is a grammatical error in the sentence, "A packet of crisps were found on the bench." The subject in the sentence is "packet of chips" and not just the word "chips". Therefore, the sentence should be written as, "A packet of crisps was found on the bench.".
'Because you like movies, you see them often' is sort of a complete sentence. Some English teachers will tell you that you cannot start a sentence with Because, while others tell you that you can, but it depends on the situation. If it is for a letter or formal essay, or something of the like, you should not start your sentence with because. If it is for an unformal occasion, then you can use because.
You need a context to determine whether "ran" is transitive or intransitive. It is intransitive in the sentence, "She ran all the way home." It is transitive in the sentence, "He ran the business after his father died."
transitive yo
its intransitive because there is no object in the sentence
Sometimes he misses the ball.
transitive
transitive
Ate is intransitive in that sentence. There is no direct object."You ate pizza in the cafeteria" is an example of ate as a transitive verb (pizza is the direct object).
In this sentence stand is intransitive.
Actually, yes, a verb can be transitive and intransitive depending on the sentence. The verb eat, for example, is transitive in this sentence: "I ate an apple," but is intransitive in this one: "Lindsay already ate."Other verbs can be both as well, such as "play," "clean," and "read."Verbs are transitive when they precede a direct object, and they are intransitive when they do not.
The only verb in the sentence, "Yesterday you went to the mall", is intransitive. (The verb is "went".)
intransitive
The sentence is transitive because it has a direct object "her campaign promises." Transitive verbs require a direct object to complete their meaning.