The indirect object is class; the direct object is tickets:
Mr. Mathis gave what? Tickets.
He gave them to whom? The class.
The sentence is a declarative sentence, it makes a statement.
The nouns in the sentence are:Jordan (proper noun, the name of a person) subject of the sentence;theatre (common noun, a word for a thing) object of the preposition 'to';movies (common noun, a word for things) direct object of the verb 'to watch'.
All of us went to the movies!
We should interdict kids from watching adult movies.
The pronoun is you.
Japan
about $13 bucks
i think its $3
There are no promotional codes for movies that i have heard of. But there are surveys I have seen that can quallify you for movie tickets. There you can get free tickets.
9$ for adults7$ for kids
You can purchase online tickets for movies from various websites online. You may go directly to the theaters website and purchase tickets. You may also go to the theaters company name and purchase tickets that way.
Movies didn't exist in 1849.
Adult tickets are $9.50 Senior tickets are $7.00 Child tickets are $7.50
In order to not write a sentence fragment, you must always have a subject in your sentence and a predicate. For example: Fragment: Went to the movies. Sentence: I went to the movies.
Fandango.com shows when movies play. You can also get early tickets for some movies. That's the only site I know. Thank you!-Sallie
Yes, 'She went to the movies.' is correct.
The sentence is a declarative sentence, it makes a statement.