transitive
名词 n.
形容词 adj.
发音 trăn'zĭtĭv
英文释义
名词 n.
-
A transitive verb.
— This means that subcategorization properties do not allow us to distinguish between transitives and intransitives (both types of verbs are allowed, but not obliged, to take a direct object).
形容词 adj.
-
Making a transit or passage.
— For all symbols are fluxional; all language is vehicular and transitive, and is good, as ferries and horses are, for conveyance, not as farms and houses are, for homestead.
-
Affected by transference of signification.
— By far the greater part of the transitive or derivative applications of words depend on casual and unaccountable caprices of the feelings or the fancy.
-
Taking a direct object or objects.
— The English verb "to notice" is a transitive verb, because we say things like "She noticed a problem".
-
Having the property that if an element a is related to b and b is related to c, then a is necessarily related to c.
— "Is an ancestor of" is a transitive relation: if Alice is an ancestor of Bob, and Bob is an ancestor of Carol, then Alice is an ancestor of Carol.
- Such that, for any two elements of the acted-upon set, some group element maps the first to the second.
- Such that, for any two vertices there exists an automorphism which maps one to the other.
- Of a set of dice: not having the intransitive property.
词形变化
词汇关系
衍生词
ambitransitive
bitransitive
complex transitive
ditransitive
doubly transitive
indirect transitive
monotransitive
quasi-transitive
semi-transitive
supertransitive
transitive animate
transitive closure
transitive dependency
transitively
transitiveness
transitive set
transitive verb
transitivism
transitivity
transitivization
transitivize
tritransitive
unitransitive
untransitive
词源
词源 1
From Latin trānsitīvus, from trānsitus, from trāns (“across”) + itus, from eō (“to go”).
词源 2
From Latin trānsitīvus, from trānsitus, from trāns (“across”) + itus, from eō (“to go”).
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数据来源: Wiktionary