SHE - subject (who is doing the action? She)
GAVE - verb (what is the subject doing? Giving)
THE
WORLD - indirect object (to whom is the subject doing the action? The world)
HER
FIRST
INVENTION - direct object (what is the subject giving? Invention)
Direct object: his first film Indirect object: Spielberg
A pronoun is used as the direct object exactly as a noun is used as a direct object, as the word that receives the direct action of the verb. Example:John lost his book. He lost it on the bus.In the first sentence, the noun 'book' is the direct object of the verb lost and in the second sentence, the pronoun 'it' is the direct object of the verb lost.
The direct object is paycheck.
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.
In the sentence, "Can Shalini help us?", the first person, plural, personal pronoun us is the direct object of the verb 'help'.
To identify a direct object, first find the verb. (In the example, "offered" is the verb.) After finding the verb, ask "What?" or "Whom?". What did Mrs. Jennings offer? Mrs. Jennings offered cookies ("cookies" is the direct object).
To write a transitive sentence, you need a subject (the doer), a verb (the action), and a direct object (the receiver of the action). For example, in the sentence "She ate an apple," "She" is the subject, "ate" is the verb, and "an apple" is the direct object. This structure shows that the action of eating is done by the subject to the direct object.
The object pronoun is us, the direct object of the verb 'watches'.The pronoun 'us' is the first person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
The second sentence is better. Because English does not have a different case form for direct object and for indirect objects, there is a strong tendency to expect the first noun or pronoun after a transitive verb, such as "explain" in the given sentence, to be the direct object unless this first noun or pronoun is followed almost immediately by another noun or pronoun that serves as the direct object. In the given sentence, the direct object is a clause, so that the second sentence, which makes it clear that "you" is not the direct object, is easier to understand. A noun or pronoun in a foreign language such as Latin or German that does have a distinct dative case can almost always be properly translated into English by placing the preposition "to" before the objective case of the noun in English.
The indirect object is the thing/ person to or for whom the action is done, eg "Jim threw the ball to Sally." "Jim threw Sally the ball." Sally is the indirect object. in the first one "Jim threw the ball to Sally." the ball is the id because its the one being thrown if im wrong though let me know.
The first step to locate the direct and indirect objects of a sentence is to identify the verb. The direct object receives the action of the verb, while the indirect object receives the direct object. To find the direct object, ask "What?" after the verb, and to find the indirect object, ask "To whom?" or "For whom?"
'Gave' is the only verb in this sentence.