adjective
- relating to or being a verb that requires a direct object to complete its meaning
- having the property that if A relates to B and B relates to C, then A relates to C
Usage: grammar
Usage: mathematics; logic
Examples
- The verb ‘eat’ is transitive because it needs a direct object.
- In ‘She bought a car,’ the verb ‘bought’ is transitive.
- Intransitive verbs like ‘sleep’ don’t take direct objects, unlike transitive verbs.
- The relation ‘greater than’ is transitive in mathematics.
- If A is taller than B and B is taller than C, then A is taller than C – this shows transitivity.
- Students must learn to identify transitive and intransitive verbs.