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Mother
The nouns in the sentence are car and mother.
No.
subject,object,direct object,indirect object/object of the prepositionand predicate :) a little song for my mom ilove you mother my mother my mother that reads
There isn't one. 'Move' here is used intransitively. However, in 'he moved his mother to California', the object would be 'mother'. There is no direct object in this sentence, only an indirect object (California).
Her mother had to lambaste her for not following her instructions.
loudly
No
An example of a sentence containing an indirect object:Give me that newspaper.In this sentence, "that newspaper" is what is actually given, and is the direct object. But what about the word "me"? It is the indirect object.The indirect object comes before the direct object. It could be replaced by "to me", but when you replace the indirect object by a prepositional phrase like that, you have to rearrange the sentence, putting the direct object immediately after the verb:Give that newspaper to me.Some other examples (with the indirect object in bold):Tell your sister what happened this morning.Pay them $20 each.Show the doctor your finger.**marnie gave mother the wallet she found
Following the mother lode will require an incline plane.
My adherence mother stared at me for not following one of her rules
A noun is a word for any person, place, thing, or idea. A noun is used as the subject of a sentence, the direct or indirect object of a sentence, or the object of a preposition. Example:Jane brought her mother a treat for lunch.Jane = subjectmother = indirect objecttreat = direct objectlunch = object of the preposition for