Many ices contain fruit juices. The direct object is juices.
That sentence does not contain a direct object.
That sentence doesn't contain a direct object.
Yes. For example: Speak to him.
You can determine if a sentence does not have a direct object by checking if the verb has a direct object. If the verb does not require a direct object or if there is no noun or pronoun that directly receives the action of the verb, then the sentence does not contain a direct object.
That sentence does not have a direct object. The verb needs to be transitive (a type of action verb) for the sentence to contain a direct object. "Is" is never a transitive verb because it's not an action. "Is" is a linking verb in that sentence.
"I went to the store."
The sentence "I'm reading the newest edition" does not contain both a direct object and an indirect object.
The verb does not have a direct object in the sentence, "She is insecure."
There is no direct object in that sentence.
The direct object in the sentence "His father walks with a limp" is "a limp."
No, not all statements contain a direct object. A direct object is a noun or pronoun that receives the action of the verb in a sentence, but not all sentences have this element. Some sentences may only have a subject and a verb, with no direct object involved.
No. For a sentence to contain a direct object, the verb must be transitive (a type of action verb). "Was" is a linking verb, and "furious" is the subject complement. Subject complements and direct objects are not the same thing.