On its own, puppies is simply a plural noun. Whether it is a subject, direct, or indirect object depends on how it is used in a given sentence.
In this sentence "The puppies ran into the room," puppies is the subject.
In "Joe played with the puppies" it is a direct object.
In "Sam gave the puppies treats" it is an indirect object.
Yes. The word 'me' is the indirect object. You can identify this because you can put the word 'to' in front of the word 'me' without changing the meaning. 'They gave a bonus (direct object) to me (indirect object).'
The same objective pronouns are used whether for the direct or indirect object. Example:She told me a story. The word "me" is an indirect object pronoun; the direct object is the noun story.
A direct or indirect object is a part of a sentence. A single word in isolation is neither a direct or indirect object. However, most nouns can be used in a sentence as either a direct or indirect object.
It can be: They saw us. Or it could be an indirect object: They gave us the book. It depends on the sentence.
Which word in the sentence is the indirect object? Carol gave Steve her old computer. A. computer B. her C. Carol D. Steve
Indirect object - the students
It depends on how you use it, for example: "The bedroom is purple" The word bedroom is the subject. "He hit the bedroom" The word bedroom is the direct object. "We drink water in the bedroom" The word bedroom is the object of the preposition 'in'; 'in the bedroom.' is the indirect object of the verb.
Which word in the sentence is the indirect object? Carol gave Steve her old computer. A. computer B. her C. Carol D. Steve
In the sentence, the indirect object typically receives the direct object. Some common words that function as an indirect object include pronouns like 'him,' 'her,' 'them,' or nouns that come after the verb and before the direct object, such as 'Mary' in "I gave Mary the book."
An indirect object in a sentence is a noun or pronoun that identifies the recipient of the action in a sentence. It answers the question "to whom" or "for whom" the action is done. Example: "She gave her friend a gift." (The indirect object is "her friend.")
No, the word 'desperate' is an adjective; a word that describes a noun.The noun forms for the adjective desperate are desperateness and desperation.Nouns (and pronouns) function as the subject of a sentence or clause or the object of a verb (direct or indirect) and the object of a preposition.
It can be both it depends on how you use the word. I gave Cher the flowers - Cher is indirect object. The indirect object always goes before the direct object (the flowers). I like Cher - Cher is the direct object.