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No, the object of a preposition cannot be the subject of a sentence. The object of a preposition is a noun or pronoun that comes after a preposition in a sentence. The subject of a sentence is the noun or pronoun that performs the action of the verb.
No, "story" is not typically considered an indirect object. In a sentence, the indirect object usually receives the direct object. For example, in the sentence "She gave him a story," "him" is the indirect object and "a story" is the direct object.
No, "country" is typically not used as a direct object in a sentence. Direct objects usually receive the action of the verb, and "country" is usually the subject or object of a preposition.
In the nominative case, the function of the noun is to serve as the subject of the sentence, performing the action of the verb. In the objective case, the noun functions as the direct object, receiving the action of the verb.
Yes, a direct object can be in a prepositional phrase if the verb takes a preposition before the direct object. For example, in the sentence "She is looking for her keys," "keys" is the direct object and is part of the prepositional phrase "for her keys."
object
Yes, a noun clause is used as a subject of a sentence or the object of a verb or a preposition. For example: What you want is what you want despite what others need. Subject: What you want Verb: is Direct object: what you want Preposition: despite Object of the preposition: what others need
The plural noun sweaters can be used as a subject, a direct object, an indirect object, or the object of a preposition; for example: Subject: The sweaters are for school. Direct Object: We bought sweaters for school. Indirect Object: Dad will make the sweaters a shelf in my closet. Object of a Preposition: Dad will make a shelf for the sweaters.
The proper noun Jim can be the subject of a sentence, the direct or indirect object of the sentence, or the object of a preposition. Examples: Subject: Jim is my friend. Direct object: There is Jim now. Indirect object: We gave Jim a gift for his birthday. Object of a preposition: It turned out to be a nice day for Jim.
Always as a noun: object of a preposition direct object appositive subject subject compliment A gerund will always end in -ing.
subject predicate noun direct object indirect object apposotive (appositvie?) direct address object of preposition Ok --which one am I missing?
I can think of only five uses. Subject Direct object Indirect object Appositive Object of a preposition
As a noun, the word 'club' can be a direct object, an indirect object, a subject, an object of a preposition, and a subject complement, depending on the sentence. Without a complete sentence, there is no way of knowing what function a noun has in a sentence.
We = subject should show = predicate generosity - direct object to = preposition our = possessive adjective neighbor = object of the preposition
Pilate = subject wrote = predicate an = article inscription = direct object on = preposition the = article cross = object of the preposition
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.
The word children is the plural form of the noun child. A noun can be the subject of a sentence or clause, the direct or indirect object of a verb, or the object of a preposition. Examples: Direct object: She brought the children to the picnic. Indirect object: She made the children some sandwiches. Object of the preposition: She served the sandwiches to the children.