Yes, a person can be the direct object of a sentence or phrase; a person can also be an indirect object of a sentence or phrase. Examples:
Direct object: He brought his sister to the party.
Indirect object: He bought a new car for his wife.
When a person has direct physical control over an object, it is called "possession." Possession refers to the physical control or holding of an object by a person.
When a person has direct physical control over an object, it is called physical possession.
The word 'who' is not used as an object pronoun. The objective form for the pronoun 'who' is whom.Examples:The committee chose whom? (direct object)The person who the committee chose is Morris. (subject of the clause)Who does this library book belong to? (subject of the sentence)To whom does this library belong? (object of the preposition)
Constructive
The indirect object specifies the thing or person to which the direct object applies."The manager showed us his latest award." (direct object is "award")"He gave us nice Christmas presents." (direct object is "presents")
object
A direct object is a noun or pronoun that receives the action of the verb in a sentence. To find the direct object, you can ask the question "verb + what?" or "verb + whom?" to identify what or whom is being acted upon in the sentence.
The direct object is the thing/person/etc that 'receives' the action of the verb. They saw a large dog. Or the object is the thing etc that answers the question what or who. In the above sentence, what did they see. She wrote to my mother. Who did she write to - my mother (the object)
"You were in the mountains" does not have a direct object.
The direct object in a sentence is the person or thing that receives the action of the verb. This can be a noun or a pronoun, and it typically answers the question "what" or "whom" after the verb. It is important for the direct object to be in the objective case to show its role in the action of the sentence.
The direct object is 'some advice'. That is the thing that you gave. The indirect object is 'her'. That is the person to whom you gave the thing. In this context it means 'to her', and indeed if you reversed the order of the direct and indirect objects that is what you would say: 'I gave some advice to her.'
The verb does not have a direct object in the sentence, "She is insecure."