It can be it depends on what the sentence is.
I bought a text book - direct object
I gave Jim some money for a text book - indirect object.
Indirect object {*-*} O=('_'Q)Direct object(TAD)-----indirect object---A+LS (:(Book) ---- direct object
A direct object tells what the verb did. She gave him the book. The verb is gave. What did the verb gave actually do. Did she give the boy? Did she give the boy to Sally? No. She gave the book. So the direct object describes what the verb actually did. The verb give involved the book. The book is the direct object. What happened to the book? She gave the direct object, the book, to the indirect object, the boy.
The Book
Yes, an indirect object can come before a direct object in a sentence. For example, "She gave him the book." "Him" is the indirect object receiving the book; "the book" is the direct object being given.
Yes. We may say Give me the book or Give the book to me.
I read the book.
Book.
A pronoun is used as the direct object exactly as a noun is used as a direct object, as the word that receives the direct action of the verb. Example:John lost his book. He lost it on the bus.In the first sentence, the noun 'book' is the direct object of the verb lost and in the second sentence, the pronoun 'it' is the direct object of the verb lost.
Certainly. 'Please give me that plate.' This is an alternative to 'Please give that plate to me.'
the subject is Carlos. There is no indirect object. The direct object is 'the book'.
A direct object sentence includes a verb that directly acts upon the object. In a sentence like "She bought a book," "a book" is the direct object because it receives the action of the verb "bought." You can use "them" as the direct object in a sentence like "He ate them for breakfast," where "them" represents the object that is directly affected by the action of eating.
The subject-verb-direct object sentence pattern is a type of sentence structure where the subject performs the action of the verb on the direct object. For example, in the sentence "She (subject) read (verb) the book (direct object)," the subject "she" is performing the action of reading on the direct object "the book."