flowers
Flowers is the direct object.
The pronoun 'she' is a subject pronoun; the corresponding object pronoun is 'her'; for example:Mike brought flowers for her. (direct object = flowers; indirect object = her)She likes flowers. (subject of the sentence = she)
Examples compound direct objects:Buy bread and milk, please. Two nouns that are direct objects of the verb " buy ".I bought two new outfits and shoes to match.
It can be both it depends on how you use the word. I gave Cher the flowers - Cher is indirect object. The indirect object always goes before the direct object (the flowers). I like Cher - Cher is the direct object.
The verb does not have a direct object in the sentence, "She is insecure."
An indirect object doesn't ask, an indirect object tellswho or what gets the direct object. Example:Let's buy some flowers. What will we buy? Flowers, the direct object of the verb buy.Let's buy mom some flowers. What will we buy? Flowers, the direct object. And, who gets the direct object (flowers)? Mom gets the flowers; mom is the indirect object.An indirect object can follow the verb, coming before the direct object; or the indirect object can be the object of a preposition: Let's buy some flowers for mom.
There is no direct object in that sentence.
There is no direct object in that sentence.
The pronouns that take the place of the proper noun 'Mrs. Peyton' are she as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and her as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:Mrs. Peyton is my neighbor.She has a beautiful garden. (subject of the sentence)The garden she planted has won several prizes. (subject of the relative clause)We met her at the block party. (direct object of the verb 'met')I had a nice chat with her about flowers. (object of the preposition 'with')
John brought Brenda some flowers. (the direct object of 'brought' is flowers; the indirect object of 'brought' is 'Brenda'; John didn't bring Brenda, he brought flowers)
There is no direct object in that sentence.
There is no direct object in this sentence.