The introduction of jumping is as follows:
Jumping means jumping forward with your feet off the ground. Reduplication can be used to jump and describe energetic and lively appearance.
The verbs are introduced as follows:
Verb, a Chinese word, means a word used to express the action or state of people or things. "Verbs" are words that express the actions, existence and changes of people or things, such as walking, laughing, lying, watching, writing, flying, landing, protecting and starting.
In English, verbs usually act as the predicate of a sentence or are followed by descriptive complements as the predicate center, indicating the actions, existence and changes of the subject, or the actions and attitudes of the subject towards the object. For example, "Here he comes."
Verbs can be modified by adverbs "bu". Only a few verbs expressing psychological activities and some willing verbs can be placed in front of adverbs of degree. For example, we can say that we are afraid of him, "like him very much" and "envy him very much".
The argument number of verbs is introduced as follows:
Zero argument verb (verb without subject) The verb for weather in Chinese can be written as "It' s raining/snow" without subject and object. Most Indo-European languages do not have this usage, which means that the abstract subject "it" is needed when the weather changes. On metaverbs and intransitive verbs. Describe only actions, trends, states, etc. A subject without an object.
Double argument verbs (transitive verbs). Describe the behavior and attitude of the subject towards the object. A copula verb is also a dual argument verb, which needs no object, but a descriptive predicate to describe the state of the subject.
On meta-verbs. Including ditransitive verbs and ditransitive verbs, ditransitive verbs are verbs that need objects and indirect objects, also called giving verbs.