The Manila Times

A full-dress review of the verb types in English - 1

- JOSE A. CARILLO

FOR a thorough understand­ing of how English verbs work, let’s make a fulldress review of this part of speech by going back to its very basics. Recall that a verb is a word that expresses an act, occurrence, or mode of being, and can be any of four types — transitive, intransiti­ve, linking, and helping or auxiliary.

This type of There’s a simple test to check verb has the ability to pass on if a verb is one-place transitive. A its action to something that can sentence using it becomes nonsensica­l receive that action, and it can be if the direct object of that any of three kinds: verb is removed: “The accused received. ” “Typhoons damage.” These sentences hang in mid-air with an unformed thought — a clear sign that they are not complete sentences.

Transitive verb.

This type of verb requires only a direct object to work properly. Examples are the verbs “receive” and “damage.” See how they work: “The accused received the summons.” “Typhoons damage infrastruc­ture.”

(This term is an acronym for “twoplace transitive like ‘give;’” the “g” in “Vg” stands for “give”). This type of verb requires a direct object and may also take an indirect object.

Examples: “buy” and “bring.” See how they work: “He buysher diamonds.” “She bringshim clients.” An indirect object is optional in this type of transitive verb, so a sentence will work perfectly even with only a direct object: “He buys diamonds.” “She brings clients.”

(This term is an acronym for “twoplace transitive like ‘consider;’” the “c” in “Vc” stands for “consider”). In this type of transitive verb, the action actually takes place within the subject or doer of the action, or is done to the subject itself, then is transmitte­d to the direct object.

Examples: “consider” and “make.” See how they work: “They considered the rebellion a lost cause.” “Factual errors like this make the judge extremely suspicious.”

This type of verb can’t pass on its action to anything in the sentence. Not having the power to transmit its action to a direct object, it generally dissipates that action in itself.

Examples: “go” and “disappear.” They can only function in objectless sentence constructi­ons like

goes missing.” “The witness disappeare­d.”

A peculiarit­y of a sentence that uses an intransiti­ve verb is that it can’t be constructe­d into a passivevoi­ce sentence. We can’t say or

Intransiti­ve verb.

write these sentences: “Goes miss

Disappeare­d the witness.” These sentences don’t work because there’s no subject or doer of the action to begin with.

This type of verb doesn’t act on an object but simply connects the subject to a complement, as the verb “is” does in “Justice is supposedly blind.” Without linking verbs, see how English becomes like a paraplegic dragging itself around a room: “Justice supposedly blind.”

Linking verb. Helping or auxiliary verb.

This type of verb is used in conjunctio­n with a main verb to express shades of time, ability, degree, or conditiona­lity. A helping verb always comes before the mainverb in a sentence.

In English, the helping or auxiliary verbs are “will,” “shall,” “may,” “might,” “can,” “could,” “must,” “ought to,” “should,” “would,” “used to,” and “need.” Combining one or more of them with a main verb produces a verb phrase, as “will come” in “He will come tomorrow at 10:00 a.m.”

To evoke a precise meaning or nuance, a main verb can use more than one helping verb, as in “She hasbeensel­ling the new product for a month now.” Here, “selling” uses the helping verb “has” and the helping verb “been” to form the present perfect progressiv­e tense.

A full-dress review of the verb types in English - 2)

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