Gender, in a broad sense, is universal, and nothing was created neuter.
2
He has a masculine head, a feminine hand, and a neuter heart.
3
Often you are my comrade, and we are completely congenial, neuter entities.
4
Mentor a child, volunteer at a library, neuter some dogs, go green.
5
The third year you're a neuter; then the cycle starts all over again.
1
A verb may be transitive in one sentence and intransitive in another.
2
The intransitive uses come from the dropping out of the reflexive pronoun.
3
We began with some simple intransitive verbs: walking, jumping, speaking, writing.
4
An intransitive verb is sometimes made transitive by the aid of a preposition.
5
Why are we so often tempted to speak of expression in this intransitive way?
1
To rush is a neuterverb, here used in an active sense;-'precipitateth' gives the correct idea.-Ed.
2
Read this Lecture carefully, particularly the NOTES; after which you may parse the following adjectives and neuterverb, and, likewise, the examples that follow.
1
An intransitiveverb is sometimes made transitive by the aid of a preposition.
2
An intransitiveverb reflects back on the subject, it does not take an object.
3
Men have tried to turn "revolutionise" from a transitive to an intransitiveverb.
4
He means not the transitive verb, lay but the intransitiveverb, lie, which means recline.
5
What looks at first, therefore, like a copula turns out to be merely an impersonal intransitiveverb.
6
An intransitiveverb is one where the 'effect is confined within the subject, and does not pass over to any object.'
7
We began with some simple intransitiveverbs: walking, jumping, speaking, writing.
8
Let the teacher write transitive and intransitiveverbs on the board, and require the pupils to distinguish them.