| 41. | Transitive verb constructions may also become causative constructions.
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| 42. | Transitive verbs require the presence of an object, whereas intransitive verbs block the appearance of an object.
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| 43. | There both adjectives as independent lexical items and also adjectives pulled from transitive verbs by using reduplication.
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| 44. | In this sentence, " hugged " is a transitive verb taking " Mary " as its object.
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| 45. | There is no longer any productive morphology to derive transitive verbs from intransitive ones, or vice versa.
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| 46. | It's a transitive verb, requiring an object.
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| 47. | The following example has a transitive verb.
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| 48. | There are intransitive verbs, transitive verbs, auxiliary.
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| 49. | The first is simply that transitive verbs generally do not have an intransitive counterpart but lexical causatives do.
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| 50. | This contrasts with subject ) are treated alike and kept distinct from the object of a transitive verb.
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