[Sidenote: _The nature of intransitive verbs._]
204. Examine the verbs in the following paragraph:--
She _sprang up_ at that thought, and, taking the staff which
always guided her steps, she _hastened_ to the neighboring shrine
of Isis. Till she _had been_ under the guardianship of the kindly
Greek, that staff _had sufficed_ to conduct the poor blind girl
from corner to corner of Pompeii.--BULWER
In this there are some verbs unlike those that have been examined.
_Sprang_, or _sprang up_, expresses action, but it is complete in
itself, does not affect an object; _hastened_ is similar in use; _had
been_ expresses condition, or state of being, and can have no object;
_had sufficed_ means _had been sufficient_, and from its meaning
cannot have an object.
Such verbs are called intransitive (not crossing over). Hence
[Sidenote: _Definition._]
205. An intransitive verb is one which is complete in itself, or
which is completed by other words without requiring an object.
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