All verbs have negative forms, and many intransitive verbs also have derived transitive forms.
Alipin and oripon come from the transitive form of the archaic Visayan root word udip ("to live").
Transitive potential forms are formed with -illet and -allet, which are suffixed to the normal endings of the transitive indicative forms.
It may work to create the transitive form of a verb, although this is not always the case.
In the non-reflexive transitive form there is a pronominal prefix, /sk-/ that indicates the subject ('you') and the object ('me').
Further, verbs analogous to English cook have even more possibilities, even allowing a causative construction to substitute for the transitive form of the verb:
Many verbs in Apma have distinct transitive and intransitive forms.
The 'transitive' forms are the following (only singular forms are provided here):
Johnson listed, with supportive quotations, no fewer than 113 senses of this particular verb's transitive form and 21 of the intransitive.
In Japanese, there are a large number of verbs that alternate in various semi-regular patterns between intransitive forms and causative transitive forms, for example: