intransitive
Adverbs aren't transitive or intransitive. Transitive is an action verb that takes a direct object; intransitive is an action verb that does not take a direct object.
INTRANSITIVE. Ex Turned ON
Be is neither transitive nor intransitive because it is not an action. Be, and all forms of it, can be used as linking verbs and as auxiliary verbs.
The verb 'to jump' is intransitive. (A person does jump the ground, but jumps on the ground.)
The verb 'questioned' can be transitive or intransitive. Examples: Transitive: I was questioned endlessly. Intransitive: I questioned the veracity of the his excuse.
intransitive
It is transitive in "I looked at the dog." It is intransitive in "I looked sick."
transitive
transitive
transitive
It can be both intransitive and transitive. "The wind is blowing" is intransitive. "I'm blowing him a kiss" is transitive.
Impatient is an adjective. Only action verbs can be transitive or intransitive.
To fell a tree = transitive I fell = intransitive
Transitive
Adverbs aren't transitive or intransitive. Transitive is an action verb that takes a direct object; intransitive is an action verb that does not take a direct object.
"Fight" can be transitive and intransitive. Bobby fought Tommy. Transitive. Bobby fights quite well. Intransitive.