transitive
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Transitive \Tran"si*tive\, a. [L. transitivus: cf. F. transitif.
See {Transient}.]
1. Having the power of making a transit, or passage. [R.]
--Bacon.
[1913 Webster]
2. Effected by transference of signification.
[1913 Webster]
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. --Stewart.
[1913 Webster]
3. (Gram.) Passing over to an object; expressing an action
which is not limited to the agent or subject, but which
requires an object to complete the sense; as, a transitive
verb, for example, he holds the book.
[1913 Webster] -- {Tran"si*tive*ly}, adv. --
{Tran"si*tive*ness}, n.
[1913 Webster]
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
75 Moby Thesaurus words for "transitive":
adjectival, adverbial, attributive, auxiliary, auxiliary verb,
brittle, capricious, changeable, conjunctive, copula, copulative,
correct, corruptible, deciduous, defective verb, deponent verb,
dying, ephemeral, evanescent, fading, fickle, finite verb,
fleeting, flitting, fly-by-night, flying, formal, fragile, frail,
fugacious, fugitive, functional, glossematic, grammatic,
impermanent, impersonal verb, impetuous, impulsive, inconstant,
infinitive, insubstantial, intransitive, intransitive verb,
linking, linking verb, modal auxiliary, momentary, mortal, mutable,
neuter verb, nominal, nondurable, nonpermanent, participial,
passing, perishable, postpositional, prepositional, pronominal,
short-lived, structural, substantive, syntactic, tagmemic,
temporal, temporary, transient, transitory, undurable, unenduring,
unstable, verb, verb phrase, verbal, volatile
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