It is possible.
Because as we know there are many rules for that as follows:
S + V
S + V + O
And so on....
reference "A University Grammar of English by Randolph Quirk".
A verb with a direct object is a transitive verb. It requires an object to complete its meaning in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "I ate the apple," the verb "ate" is transitive, and "apple" is the direct object of the verb.
A direct object follows a transitive verb.
No, "close the door" is a verb phrase, with "close" as the main verb and "the door" as the object of the verb. In this case, "the door" is the direct object of the verb.
A direct object receives the action performed by the subject. The verb used with a direct object is always an action verb.
She (subject) watched (transitive verb) the movie (direct object). They (subject) cooked (transitive verb) dinner (direct object). He (subject) read (transitive verb) the book (direct object). The students (subject) completed (transitive verb) the assignment (direct object).
A verb with a direct object is a transitive verb. It requires an object to complete its meaning in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "I ate the apple," the verb "ate" is transitive, and "apple" is the direct object of the verb.
no a direct object will always be after the verb.
The direct object of a sentence takes the action of the verb.
The verb is called a transitive verb if it takes a direct object.The verb is called an intransitive verb if it has no direct object or only an indirect object.
A direct object follows a transitive verb.
The direct object is the word that receives the action of the verb. Examples:The dog chased the cat. ('cat' is the direct object of the verb 'chased')The cat caught a mouse. ('mouse' is the direct object of the verb 'caught')Who ate the cookies? ('cookies' is the direct object of the verb 'ate')I gave the cake to him. ('cake' is the direct object, it directly receives the action of the verb 'gave'; him is the indirect object, object of the preposition 'to')I gave the dog a bone. ('bone' is the direct object of the verb 'gave'; 'dog' is the indirect object)
object
A direct object receives the action performed by the subject. The verb used with a direct object is always an action verb.
There is no direct object in that sentence. Felt is being used as a linking verb, not an action verb. The verb must be an action to take a direct object.
The verb is "like" The direct object is "home"
A transitive verb is the verb used when the subject of the sentence is the one doing the action; the direct object is the recipient of the action word. for example: The boy throws the ball. Throws is the verb and ball is the object.
A transitive verb takes a direct object.