In the sentence Chandler gave her the magazine, the indirect object is her and the direct object is the magazine
The indirect object is "her"; "the magazine" is the direct object.
Yes. The word 'me' is the indirect object. You can identify this because you can put the word 'to' in front of the word 'me' without changing the meaning. 'They gave a bonus (direct object) to me (indirect object).'
the teacher gave the class cake.class is the indirect object because its telling what the teacher gave to them
what is the indirect object
The indirect object always comes before the direct object. Also the indirect object can be made into a phrase using to or for.I gave the dog a bone. -- The verb is gave, if you ask the question what did I give? the answer is a bonethis is the direct object, the dog is the indirect object.I gave a bone to the dog. -- the indirect object is made into a phrase using to
This is how you can distinguish/recognize the indirect object from the direct object.The indirect object always goes before the direct object. (direct object is bold / indirect subject is italics)I gave Jim the book.The indirect object can be changed into a phrase beginning with to.I gave the book to Jim
An indirect object is always a noun (or an equivalent phrase). I gave the dog a bone -- "the dog" is the indirect object.
I gave her the love letter. Or, I gave the love letter to her.In both sentences, the direct object of the verb 'gave' is the noun 'letter' and the indirect object is the pronoun 'her'.
I gave my dog a bone ('my dog' = indirect object; 'a bone' = direct object). They called me a taxi. (taxi - direct object, me- indirect object)
The indirect object is class; the direct object is tickets: Mr. Mathis gave what? Tickets. He gave them to whom? The class.
There is no indirect object. Teacher is the subject, gave is the verb, love is the direct object, and to the children is the prep phrase.
(to) Steve. Steve is indirect object.