Yes it is, and is specifically an object.
In the sentence 'Tom will race with four other boys', the word 'race' is a verb I believe.
The word 'race' in that sentence is a verb because it requires action. The word 'boy' is a noun in that sentence, i.e. the name of something.
"B" is the answer. Tom won the race.
Yes, in the example sentence, the word 'race' is used as a noun; a word for a competition; a word for a thing.The word 'race' also functions as a verb: race, races, racing, raced.
The direct object is the noun Bill. The noun assistant is the object of the preposition 'as'.
A verb.
a noun
No, the word 'bored' in that sentence is an adjective.The adjective 'bored' is functioning as a predicate adjective (a type of subject complement), an adjective following a linking verb that renames or restates the subject (he = bored).
There are 2. "Tom" is a proper noun (a name). The word "questions" is a plural common noun.
The simple subject in the sentence is "Tom Sawyer." It is the main noun that the sentence is describing.
Winning the track race was feasible enough for Tom
No, it's a verb, in the infinitive case.