In syntax, intransitivity is a property held by a verb. Being intransitive means that a verb does not take one of the arguments that a transitive verb would normally take, the object. Instead, intransitive verbs take only one argument: the subject.
| Attributes | Values |
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| rdfs:label |
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| rdfs:comment |
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| sameAs | |
| dcterms:subject | |
| abstract |
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