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Question by  aquamarine (33)

In Italian grammar, what are some transitive verbs?

 
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Answer by  patti (29325)

A transitive verb (in any language) takes a direct object. "Paul reads a book" is an example; in "Paul read" the direct object is implied. In Italian: "Paolo legge un libro" or "Paolo legge." Any action word that requires an object to receive the action is a transitive verb. There are hundreds in Italian, too many to list here.

 
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Answer by  Sprachprofi (6)

"Transitive" with relation to a verb means that it can have an object. Most Italian verbs can have objects, for example: chiamare, mangiare, bere, dare, cercara and risolvere.

 
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Answer by  Eoin (11)

Examples for transitive verbs in Italian are: abbandonare (to leave, abandon), leggere (to read), notare (to note, notice), eleggere (to choose), tagliare (to cut), tenere (to hold), riunire (to gather), obbligare (to oblige, force), avere (to have), occupare (to occupy), scrivere (to write), evitare (to avoid), telefonare (to phone, call), narrare (to tell).

 
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Answer by  cmunch (97)

Examples would be avere or essere. These are the two main, and most often used "transitive verbs" in the Italian language.

 
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Answer by  senthilkumar (299)

Transitive verbs are which taking the direct objects. for example Loro hanno giĆ  studiato la lezione this mean they have already studied the lesson. Io ho mangiato una pera(i eat pear).

 
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Answer by  puella22 (160)

First you should understand what a transitive verb actually is. So, just in case you don't, it's a verb that requires some sort of object combined with it in order to make any sense as part of a sentence or phrase. Here are a few examples: portare (to carry), gustare (to enjoy), preferire (to prefer), negare (to deny).

 
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Answer by  Tabatha (440)

Italian Transitive Verbs: Salutare: greet Trovare: find Incontrare: meet Aiutare: help Abbracciare: hug, embrace Ascolto: listen Portare: bring Chiamare: call Aspettare: wait for Amare: love

 
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