A prepositional object is the objective noun that usually follows a preposition and that completes a prepositional phrase, e.g. the word house in the following:
No. it's usually a noun like "on the porch" porch is the object
to is the preposition. Emperor is the Object of the preposition. To their Emperor is the prepostional phrase.
"in her backyard"
No, a sentence can have a direct object without an indirect object. The direct object is the receiver of the action, while the indirect object is the recipient. They serve different roles in a sentence.
The prepositional phrase is "in 1271".
A prepositional phrase is a preposition followed by its object (a noun or pronoun) along with any modifiers (adjectives). For example:The book is on the table. ("on" is the preposition, "table" is the object of the preposition)Take Sheila with you. (prep: with, obj: you)Behind every great man, there's a great woman. (prep: behind, obj: man)
to help with fund-raising events
Did you have a research project due tomorrow or did you turn it in last Friday. Is your school mascot the tigers.
Nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and adverbs can function as complements in a sentence. Complements provide additional information about the subject or object in a sentence, completing the meaning of the verb.
"Are you one of the cheerleaders?" you put you as the subject and are as the predicate. Then you make a diagnal line under cheerleaders (as a modifier) an put "one" on it. After, you do that put your prepostional phrase under you example:. of father is the prepositional phrase! Hope this helped:D:)
Adverbs tell how, when or where. examples She slept well. (well = adverb telling how) She will sleep well tonight. (tonight = adverb telling where) She slept well on the couch. (on the couch = adverbial prepostional phrases telling where)
"From water, health" is an English equivalent of the French phrase d'eau santé. The pronunciation of the feminine singular prepostional phrase -- which also translates as "health from water," "health of water" -- will be "do san-tey" in French.