| 41. | General intransitive verbs describe actions or events.
|
| 42. | There are intransitive verbs, transitive verbs, auxiliary.
|
| 43. | Prototypically, applicatives apply to intransitive verbs.
|
| 44. | Circumstantials are conceptually similar to valency of an intransitive verb by adding a direct object, while circumstantials cannot.
|
| 45. | Intransitive verbs rely on the animacy of their subjects while transitive verbs rely on the animacy of their objects.
|
| 46. | For a similar group of intransitive verbs ( especially motion verbs ), it is the subject which is incorporated.
|
| 47. | English has derivational morphology that parallels ergativity in that it operates on intransitive verbs and objects of transitive verbs.
|
| 48. | It is often used with intransitive verbs with the sense of being in the state of having done something.
|
| 49. | Unaccusative verbs are subdivided into ergative intransitive verbs ( depicted as " pure unaccusatives " ) and alternating unaccusatives.
|
| 50. | "Login " has had a place of honor in the Oxford English Dictionary as an intransitive verb since 1962.
|