Transitive vs Intransitive

Understand which phrasal verbs need an object and which ones stand alone

๐Ÿ“ Lesson 2 - Syntax Rules

Transitive vs Intransitive Phrasal Verbs

Before you can understand whether a phrasal verb is separable or inseparable, you need to know something even more fundamental: Does the phrasal verb take an object at all? This is the difference between transitive and intransitive phrasal verbs.

Getting this wrong can lead to awkward sentences that confuse native speakers. Let's master this essential grammar concept.

Understanding Transitivity in Grammar

In grammar, transitivity refers to whether a verb requires a direct object to complete its meaning. This concept applies to all verbs, not just phrasal verbs, but it's especially important for phrasal verbs because it determines:

  • Sentence structure: Whether you need to add an object after the phrasal verb
  • Separability: Only transitive phrasal verbs CAN be separable (intransitive ones have no object to place anywhere!)
  • Meaning clarity: Using a transitive verb without an object often makes no sense

Transitive

Requires an object to complete the meaning.

  • Turn off the light โœ“
  • Turn off... (what?) โœ—

Intransitive

No object needed. The action is complete on its own.

  • The plane took off โœ“
  • She woke up โœ“

Explore Each Type in Detail

Click on the tabs below to learn more about each type of phrasal verb:

Transitive Phrasal Verbs

Definition: A transitive phrasal verb requires a direct object to complete its meaning. Without the object, the sentence feels incomplete or makes no sense.

Think of transitive phrasal verbs as actions that need a "receiver." You can't just "pick up" - you need to pick up something or someone.

Common Transitive Phrasal Verbs
TURN ON / TURN OFF
Please turn on the computer.
Don't forget to turn off the lights.
PICK UP
Can you pick up the kids from school?
I need to pick up my dry cleaning.
PUT ON / TAKE OFF
Put on your jacket - it's cold outside.
Please take off your shoes at the door.
FIGURE OUT
I can't figure out this puzzle.
We need to figure out a solution.
LOOK UP
I need to look up that word in the dictionary.
Can you look up the address?
THROW AWAY
Don't throw away those papers!
You should throw away expired food.

Key Point

Transitive phrasal verbs can be separable or inseparable. This is determined by other rules (see Lesson 1: Separable vs Inseparable).

Intransitive Phrasal Verbs

Definition: An intransitive phrasal verb does NOT take a direct object. The action is complete on its own - the subject performs the action without affecting anything else.

Think of intransitive phrasal verbs as complete actions. When you "wake up," you don't wake up something - you just wake up. The action happens to the subject itself.

Common Intransitive Phrasal Verbs
WAKE UP
I woke up at 7 AM.
โ†’ No object needed. "I" performed the action of waking.
TAKE OFF
The plane took off on time.
โ†’ No object needed. The plane performed the action of departing.
BREAK DOWN
My car broke down on the highway.
โ†’ No object needed. The car stopped working by itself.
SHOW UP
She finally showed up to the party.
โ†’ No object needed. She arrived/appeared.
GROW UP
I grew up in Brazil.
โ†’ No object needed. The speaker matured/became adult.
COME BACK
When will you come back?
โ†’ No object needed. The person returns.
GO ON
The meeting went on for hours.
โ†’ No object needed. The meeting continued.
PASS AWAY
My grandmother passed away last year.
โ†’ No object needed. (euphemism for "died")

Important

Intransitive phrasal verbs are NEVER separable because there's no object to place anywhere! Don't try to add objects to them.

The Tricky Part: Some Phrasal Verbs Are Both!

Here's where it gets interesting: many phrasal verbs can be BOTH transitive and intransitive, depending on how they're used. The meaning often changes!

Phrasal Verb Transitive Use (with object) Intransitive Use (no object)
take off Take off your hat. (remove) The plane took off. (departed)
pick up Pick up that pen. (lift) Business is picking up. (improving)
break down Break down the problem. (analyze) The car broke down. (stopped working)
work out Work out a solution. (find) I work out every day. (exercise)
turn up Turn up the volume. (increase) He never turned up. (appeared)

The Key Question

When you encounter a phrasal verb, always ask: "Does this action need a receiver?"

โœ“ "I woke up" โ†’ Complete. No receiver needed.

โœ“ "I picked up the book" โ†’ "The book" is the receiver.

โœ— "I picked up" โ†’ Incomplete! What did you pick up?

Key Takeaways

Remember

1. Transitive phrasal verbs REQUIRE an object to complete the meaning.
2. Intransitive phrasal verbs do NOT take an object - they're complete alone.
3. Only transitive phrasal verbs can be separable.
4. Many phrasal verbs can be BOTH, with different meanings.
5. Always check the context to determine which type you're dealing with.

Ready to Practice?

Test your knowledge with interactive exercises on transitive vs intransitive phrasal verbs!

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