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school
The direct object is 'pen', which she gave to Alex. If Alex were the direct object, the phrase 'Jennifer gave Alex...' would mean that she gave Alex to someone or something.
In the sentence, "lay" is transitive as it has a direct object (backpack), while "laid" is intransitive as it does not have a direct object.
Clique is a noun and could be used as a subject or a direct object in a sentence. Subject: Their clique was very exclusive and tightly knit. Direct Object: She was upset at the clique.
Yes.
The nouns in the sentence are sun and yesterday.The is a definite article.'was shining' is the auxiliary and the main verb.brightly is an adverb.
school
Ms. Tanner said to draw a picture of a school.
In school today we will be debating who should be president and why.
In that sentence, yesterday is an adverb, 'visited yesterday'. An example sentence for the noun: Yesterday was the last day of the month. The last day of school was yesterday.
what is the direct object in this sentence, "research papers those ubiquitous documents on high school campuses provide learning opportunities for our students."
The direct object is 'pen', which she gave to Alex. If Alex were the direct object, the phrase 'Jennifer gave Alex...' would mean that she gave Alex to someone or something.
The noun 'willow' is a word for a type or tree (common noun), or occasionally the name of a person (proper noun).A noun functions as the subject of the sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The willow is a graceful tree. (subject of the sentence)The leaves that the willow dropped littered the lawn. (subject of the relative clause)We planted a willow in the yard. (direct object of the verb 'planted')I got the assignment from Willow at school yesterday. (object of the preposition 'from')
The complement in the sentence is "the grant." It serves to complete the meaning of the verb "awarded" by specifying what was given to the school.
I made a great entrance yesterday at school
School is an object. He is a pronoun. Went is a verb. To is a preposition.