No, an indirect object is usually preceded by a preposition and receives the direct object. Adverbs and adjectives modify verbs and nouns, respectively, but not typically indirect objects.
An indirect object can be modified by adverbs or prepositional phrases to provide additional information about the action being performed on the indirect object.
The indirect object in the sentence is "it." It is the recipient of the direct object "spent," which is an action being done to the indirect object.
"Completely desperate" is a predicate adjective here describing the situation.
An object (direct object, indirect object, and object of a preposition) can be a noun, a pronoun, or an adjective.EXAMPLESobject noun: Mary bakes bread to relax. (the noun 'bread' is the direct object of the verb 'bakes')object pronoun: Mary made you some bread. (the pronoun 'you' is the indirect object of the verb 'made')object adjective: This bread smells great. (the adjective 'great' is the object of the verb 'smells')
Yes, in a sentence with both a direct and indirect object, the indirect object typically precedes the direct object. For example, in the sentence "She gave him a book," "him" is the indirect object and "book" is the direct object.
Yes, an indirect object can be modified by the article "an".Examples:He gave an orangutan an orange.We paid an accountant fifty dollars to complete our tax forms.
No. adverbs and adjectives are modifiers. They modify verbs (adverb) and nouns (adjective).An indirect object could be made up of an adjective and a noun.The dog brought his young master a stick.In this sentence the direct object is stick. The indirect object is master the adjective young modifies the noun master.
Objects are usually nouns or noun phrases. Adverbs modify verbs. So no.
An indirect object can be modified by adverbs or prepositional phrases to provide additional information about the action being performed on the indirect object.
Difficult is an adjective, so no, it cannot be an indirect object. Indirect objects are nouns or pronouns that receive the direct object.
The indirect object in the sentence is "it." It is the recipient of the direct object "spent," which is an action being done to the indirect object.
It is a noun so can serve as subject, object, or indirect object; object of a verb or a verb phrase; object of an adjective; object of an adverb or an adverbial phrase. For forty years the children of Israel did sojurn in the wilderness.
"His lawyer" could be a direct object or indirect object, but it could not be an adverb. In "He called his lawyer", "his lawyer" is a direct object. In "He showed his lawyer the contract", "his lawyer" is an indirect object.
indirect
An adverb can modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The object of a preposition is a noun or a pronoun; an adverb can modify the object indirectly by modifying an adjective describing the object. Example:We made plans for a very busy day. (the preposition is for; the object of the preposition is day; the adjective busy describes the noun day; the adverb very modifies the adjective busy)
No. You-subject. Spent-verb. It-direct object. ly- adverb.
yes yes it did :P u smart a**