Transitive & Intransitive

Transitive & Intransitive Verbs for Kids | Does the Verb Need an Object? | Grade 5 | English1to5.com
⭐ Grade 5 • Grammar • Topic 2 of 8🔀

Transitive & Intransitive Verbs

Does the Verb Need an Object?

Learn which verbs need objects and which stand alone!

📖 Let’s Learn Transitive & Intransitive Verbs!

Some verbs NEED an object to make sense: “She ate an apple.” (Ate what? → an apple). These are transitive verbs. Other verbs are complete by themselves: “She laughed.” (No object needed!) These are intransitive verbs.

Understanding this difference helps you write grammatically correct sentences and is essential for sentence analysis — a key skill tested in exams!

💡 The Rule

Transitive verb = NEEDS an object to complete its meaning.
“She ate ___.” (Ate what? Needs an object!) → “She ate an apple.”
Intransitive verb = COMPLETE without an object.
“She laughed.” (Complete! No object needed.)

🎯 Key Concept

🔀 Transitive: She ate an apple. (needs object)
🔀 Intransitive: She laughed. (no object needed)
💡 Test: Ask “Verb + WHAT/WHOM?” If there’s an answer → transitive!

📋 Verb Types

➡️📦
Transitive

Needs object: ate an apple, kicked the ball

➡️
Intransitive

No object: laughed, slept, arrived, cried

🔍
Test

Ask “WHAT?” after verb. Answer? = transitive

🔄
Both!

Some verbs can be BOTH: “She sang (intrans) / She sang a song (trans)”

📝
Common Trans.

eat, kick, read, write, buy, make, give

📝
Common Intrans.

laugh, cry, sleep, arrive, die, go, sit

🔀 Examples & Practice

Learn with organized examples and sentences!

➡️📦

Transitive Verbs (Need Object)

She ate an apple.
ate WHAT? → an apple (object needed)
“Without “an apple”, the sentence feels incomplete: “She ate ___.””
He kicked the ball.
kicked WHAT? → the ball
“Kicked needs an object — you can’t just say “He kicked.””
Priya read a book.
read WHAT? → a book
“Read needs an object to tell us what was read.”
They built a house.
built WHAT? → a house
“Built needs an object — built what?”
She wrote a letter.
wrote WHAT? → a letter
“Wrote needs an object to be complete.”
I bought a new bag.
bought WHAT? → a new bag
“Bought always needs an object — bought what?”
➡️

Intransitive Verbs (No Object)

She laughed.
laughed — complete! No object needed.
“You cannot say “She laughed something.” Laugh doesn’t take an object.”
The baby cried.
cried — complete by itself
“Cried is complete. (You don’t cry “something.”)”
He slept.
slept — no object possible
“Slept is intransitive — you don’t sleep “something.””
The train arrived.
arrived — complete
“Arrived doesn’t need an object — the train simply arrived.”
She smiled.
smiled — no object
“Smiled is complete — you don’t smile “something.””
The bird flew.
flew — no object needed
“Flew is intransitive here — the bird simply flew.”
🔄

Verbs That Can Be BOTH!

She sang. (intransitive)
no object — just sang
“Sang is intransitive here — she just sang, no specific song.”
She sang a song. (transitive)
sang WHAT? → a song (object)
“Sang is transitive here — sang what? a song.”
He runs. (intransitive)
no object — just runs
“Runs alone — he simply runs.”
He runs a business. (transitive)
runs WHAT? → a business (object)
“Runs a business — transitive with an object.”
She plays. (intransitive)
no object
“Plays alone — she just plays.”
She plays cricket. (transitive)
plays WHAT? → cricket (object)
“Plays cricket — transitive with object.”
🔍

How to Test Any Verb

Step 1: Find the verb.
identify the action word
“”She kicked the ball.” → verb = kicked.”
Step 2: Ask “WHAT?” or “WHOM?”
after the verb
“Kicked WHAT? → the ball. There IS an answer → transitive!”
Step 3: If answer exists → transitive.
object found
“If you get an answer to “WHAT?”, the verb is transitive.”
Step 4: If no answer → intransitive.
no object
“”She laughed.” Laughed WHAT? No answer → intransitive!”
Remember: Some can be BOTH!
depends on usage
“”She sang” (intransitive) vs “She sang a song” (transitive).”

📢 Read & Identify Verb Type

Say each — is the verb transitive or intransitive?

She ATE an apple. (transitive)She LAUGHED. (intransitive)He KICKED the ball. (transitive)The baby CRIED. (intransitive)She SANG. (intransitive)She SANG a song. (transitive)Ask: Verb + WHAT?Answer = Transitive!

✏️ Transitive or Intransitive?

Choose the right answer!

1. “She ate an apple.” — “ate” is ___.

2. “She laughed.” — “laughed” is ___.

3. Transitive verbs NEED a/an ___.

4. To test: ask “Verb + ___?” after the verb.

5. “She sang a song” — transitive or intransitive?

🎯 Transitive or Intransitive?

Click each sentence to identify!

Click any to check!

📝 Analysis Practice

Identify verb type and object (if any)!

1

She ate an apple. → Verb: ate. Ate WHAT? an apple. → Transitive (DO = apple)

2

The children laughed. → Verb: laughed. Laughed WHAT? No answer. → Intransitive

3

He runs a business. → Verb: runs. Runs WHAT? a business. → Transitive (DO = business)

4

She smiled brightly. → Verb: smiled. Smiled WHAT? No answer. → Intransitive

5

She sang a beautiful song. → Verb: sang. Sang WHAT? a song. → Transitive (DO = song)

6

The bird flew away. → Verb: flew. Flew WHAT? No answer. → Intransitive

🧠

Memory Trick

Remember T and I:
Transitive = Takes an object (needs it!)
Intransitive = Independent (doesn’t need one!)
Or: Transfer the action TO something (object)
It just happens, no transfer needed!

🎮 Transitive & Intransitive Verbs Quiz

Test what you’ve learned!

A transitive verb needs…

An intransitive verb is…

“She ate an apple” — “ate” is…

“She laughed” — “laughed” is…

To test, ask “Verb + ___?”

Some verbs can be…

“She sang” is ___, “She sang a song” is ___.

Which is intransitive?

🎉 Quiz Complete!

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🌟

Fun Facts

In English, most verbs can be BOTH transitive and intransitive depending on how they’re used! “I eat” (intransitive) vs “I eat rice” (transitive). Context decides!

The words “transitive” and “intransitive” come from Latin: trans = across. A transitive verb “passes across” to an object. An intransitive verb doesn’t pass to anything — it stays put!

🧠 Tips for Parents

🔀

WHAT Test

Practice the “WHAT test” daily: “Papa ate. Ate WHAT? Dinner! → Transitive.” “She yawned. Yawned WHAT? Nothing! → Intransitive.” Simple and effective!

📝

Both Types

Give verbs that can be both: “sing, play, run, eat.” Child uses each as transitive AND intransitive: “She sang” vs “She sang a song.”

🎯

Sentence Analysis

In any textbook sentence, identify: Subject, Verb, Object. “Is the verb transitive?” This builds the foundation for advanced grammar.

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