Intransitive vs Doing - What's the difference?
intransitive | doing |
(grammar, of a verb) Not transitive: not having, or not taking, a direct object.
(rare) Not transitive or passing further; kept; detained.
A deed or action, especially when somebody is held responsible for it.
The sound made by an elastic object when struck by or striking a hard object.
As an adjective intransitive
is (grammar|of a verb) not transitive: not having, or not taking, a direct object.As a verb doing is
(rare|chiefly|netherlands|nonstandard).intransitive
English
Adjective
(-)- The word "drink" is a transitive verb in "they drink wine", but an intransitive one in "they drink often."
- And then it is for the image's sake and so far is intransitive ; but whatever is paid more to the image is transitive and passes further. — Jeremy Taylor.
Antonyms
* transitiveSee also
* ergative ----doing
English
Alternative forms
* (pedantic)Etymology 1
See (do).Noun
(en noun)- This is his doing . (= "He did it.")