The word 'Daedalus' is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a character in Greek mythology; a word for a person.
A noun can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, as the direct or indirect object of a verb, and as the object of a preposition.
[object Object]
[object Object]
Ball can be a direct object. David threw the ball.
If the word "writing" is used as a noun, then it can be a direct object. Without a complete sentence, "writing" is just a word. Example: He enjoys writing. (direct object of the verb "enjoys")
"the grass" is the direct object. (It's a phrase, not a word. Direct objects are nouns, pronouns, or phrases.)
The word suitcase is a noun and can be used as a direct object in a sentence. For example you could say: "Please give the suitcase to John." In that sentence "the suitcase" is the direct object and John is the indirect object.
No. The word "decorate" can only be used as a verb, and never a direct object.
It is the direct object. "I really want what."a direct object
yes
The word 'ball' is the direct object of the verb 'grabs'.
No, ribbon is not a direct object. A direct object is a noun or pronoun that receives the action of the verb. In the sentence, "She wrapped the ribbon around the gift," "ribbon" is the object being wrapped, not the direct object.
Site is a word, it can be a noun or a verb. It depends on how it is used in a sentence which decides if it is an indirect object, direct object or subject etc