The sentence 'Tim invited you to a soccer game' is neither an indirect object nor a direct object. It is a sentence. It CONTAINS an indirect object ('a soccer game') and a direct object ('you'). It also contains a subject ('Tim'), a verb ('invited'), and a preposition ('to').
In grammar, technique can serve as either a direct object or an indirect object, depending on how it is used in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "She taught me a new technique," "me" is the indirect object and "a new technique" is the direct object.
The direct object is "you"; the indirect object (I believe) is "this".
no
The sentence has two direct objects. direct object - the game indirect object - your team
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 direct object is 'the lake'; the indirect object is 'us'.
The indirect object is "her"; "the magazine" is the direct object.
what is the indirect object
There is no indirect object in the sentence "we recycle newspapers." The sentence contains a subject "we," a verb "recycle," and a direct object "newspapers."
There is no indirect object in this sentence. Time is the direct object of need, and project is the direct object of finish.
Yes. Jack got a taxi for me. direct object - taxi indirect object - me
In this case "money" is the indirect object, "the bank"is the direct object.