Farmer is the direct object.
The girl/ gave/ him/ a book. The monkey/ showed/ her/ his bottom. The cactus/ gave/ them/ an idea. Subject / Verb / Indirect object / Direct object. You can check that these are indirect objects by testing whether you can put 'to' in front of them without altering the meaning. The girl/ gave/ to him/ a book. subject verb direct object
Lets review the direct object first..The direct object tells the what in the sentence, as in:The boy picked the flowerIn this sentence, flower is the direct object. The boy picked what? - The flower..The indirect object tells the to/for whom or to/for where, etc., as in: The boy picked the flower for the girlIn this sentence, girl is the indirect object. The boy picked the flower for whom? - the girl.
The noun 'hug' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, as the direct or indirect object of a verb, as the object of a preposition.Examples:The hug made me feel better. (subject of the sentence)The response that the hug produced was a smile. (subject of the relative clause)She gave a hug to the little girl. (direct object of the verb)The baby reached up for a hug. (object of the preposition)
Je t'aime is not gender-specific, but it is number specific, i.e. one person loves one person, but it can be: (1) one boy loves one girl, (2) one boy loves one boy, (3) one girl loves one boy, or (4) one girl loves one girl.
A possessive noun phrase functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The bicycle of the girl rested against the stairs. (noun phrase, subject of the sentence)The girl's bicycle rested against the stairs. (possessive noun phrase, subject of the sentence)We enjoyed the location of the cabin on the lake. (noun phrase, direct object of the verb 'enjoyed')We enjoyed the cabin's location on the lake. (possessive noun phrase, direct object of the verb 'enjoyed')We planned a party for the birthday of my mother. (noun phrase, object of the preposition 'for')We planned a party for my mother's birthday. (possessive noun phrase, object of the preposition'for')
Sea is the direct object.
Lets review the direct object first..The direct object tells the what in the sentence, as in:The boy picked the flowerIn this sentence, flower is the direct object. The boy picked what? - The flower..The indirect object tells the to/for whom or to/for where, etc., as in: The boy picked the flower for the girlIn this sentence, girl is the indirect object. The boy picked the flower for whom? - the girl.
A direct object is any noun that receives the action of the verb. "The girl hit the ball over the fence." In this sentence the word ball is the direct object because it is the noun receiving the action of the verb.
The girl/ gave/ him/ a book. The monkey/ showed/ her/ his bottom. The cactus/ gave/ them/ an idea. Subject / Verb / Indirect object / Direct object. You can check that these are indirect objects by testing whether you can put 'to' in front of them without altering the meaning. The girl/ gave/ to him/ a book. subject verb direct object
The pronouns that will replace the noun phrase 'the young girl' are she as a subject and her as an object in a sentence.Examples:The young girl wore a blue dress. (subject of the sentence)She wore a blue dress. (subject of the sentence)I saw the young girl in the blue dress. (direct object of the verb 'saw')I saw her in the blue dress. (direct object of the verb 'saw')
The noun 'hug' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, as the direct or indirect object of a verb, as the object of a preposition.Examples:The hug made me feel better. (subject of the sentence)The response that the hug produced was a smile. (subject of the relative clause)She gave a hug to the little girl. (direct object of the verb)The baby reached up for a hug. (object of the preposition)
Puell(a*) = girl in Latin (as in the language of the Romans) or did you mean latin as in Latin- AmericanPuer = boy*This ending is word is subject to change as it changes in the sentence from a subject (Nominative) to Direct Object (Accusative)Puella, Puellae F
If a girl loves you and loves another girl then your basically dating a bisexual
No. There is no separate word for female farmers. A farmer is a farmer. Farmess is not a real word.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.A basic sentence is made up of a subject (a noun or pronoun) and a verb (an action or a state of being). A sentence must have a verb. Examples:The girl sings. (subject noun 'girl', verb 'sings')The little girl sings. (adjective 'little' describes the noun 'girl')A sentence can be simple or complex. In a complex sentence, a noun functions as the subject of the sentence or a clause, and as an object as the direct object or indirect object of the verb; and the object of a preposition. Examples:I heard a girl singing. (the noun 'girl' is subject of the clause; the clause 'a girl singing' is the direct object of the verb 'heard')We saw the little girl. (the noun 'girl' is the direct object of the verb 'saw', described by the adjective 'little')I gave the little girl a book. (the direct object of the verb 'gave' is the noun 'book'; the indirect object of the verb is the noun 'girl')The book was for a little girl. (the noun 'girl' is the object of the preposition 'for')A noun can also function as an adjective to describe a noun. This function is called an attributive noun (also called a noun adjunct). Example:I gave the little girl a story book. (the noun 'story' describes the noun 'book')A noun and an adjective can also function as subject complements.Subject complements are:A predicate nominative is a noun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.A predicate adjective is the adjective following a linking verb which modifies (describes) the subject of the sentence.The girl was a child. (the noun 'child' restates the subject noun 'girl')The little girl was happy. (the adjective 'happy' is the predicate adjective describing the subject noun 'girl')
He gave a gold coin. -- in this sentence the direct object is gold coin.He gave the beggar a gold coin. -- in this sentence the beggar is the indirect object.Another example:My brother gave his girl friend some roses. -- to find the direct object ask the question - what did my brother give? - the answer is roses so roses is the direct object. His girlfriend is the indirect object.The indirect object often comes after for or to.He called a taxi for me.My brother gave some roses to his girlfriend.
The grammer you have used makes no sense -- what is it you are trying to ask? Is your question: "How do I know if girl loves me?" Or is it "How do YOU know that a girl loves me?" Or is it "WHAT do you know about the girl who loves me?" There is simply no way to answer your question as stated. If you rephrase it so that it is clear, we can take a better stab at it.