the quarterback
direct object
direct object
There is no indirect object. Teacher is the subject, gave is the verb, love is the direct object, and to the children is the prep phrase.
A noun functions as:the subject of a sentencethe subject of a clausethe direct or indirect object of a verbthe object of a prepositiona predicate nominative (subject complement)an object complementa noun of direct addressa possessive nouna collective nounan attributive noun (a noun adjunct)
A noun functions as:the subject of a sentencethe subject of a clausethe direct object of a verbthe indirect object of a verbthe object of a prepositiona predicate nominativea subject complement (predicate nominative)object complementa noun of direct addressan attributive noun to describe another nouna collective noun to group nouns for people or things
Nouns function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:Education is my priority at this time.the abstract noun 'education' is the subject of the sentencethe abstract noun 'priority' is the direct object of the verb 'is'the abstract noun 'time' is the object of the preposition 'at'A taxi hit the mailbox on the corner.the concrete noun 'taxi' is the subject of the sentencethe concrete noun 'mailbox' is the direct object of the verb 'hit'the noun corner is the object of the preposition 'on'The pie that my mother made was the winner.the concrete noun 'mother' is the subject of the relative clausethe abstract noun 'winner' is the direct object of the verb 'was'.the subject of the sentence, 'pie' is also a concrete noun.
indirect object
object
"You were in the mountains" does not have a direct object.
The verb does not have a direct object in the sentence, "She is insecure."
The direct object is "you"; the indirect object (I believe) is "this".
"You" can be either a direct or indirect object: It is a direct object in "I want to kiss you." It is an indirect object in "Henry is going to give you the tickets."