In the sentence, 'The tiny cat is very curious.' there is no indirect object, only the direct object 'curious'.
Yes, and very often. Example: "This sentence has a direct object." where object is the D.O.
A very small object is called a "microscopic" object or "minuscule" object, depending on the size. It can also be referred to as a "tiny" or "miniscule" object.
People get very curious and cannot resist the fact of never knowing the truth of the object.
A direct object has something done to it, for example:She ate the carrot.We passed the exam.In the above sentences, "the carrot" and "the exam" are direct objects. They are very common in both spoken and written English.An indirect object is another noun or pronoun governed by the verb, but not in the same direct way. This is much clearer with a few examples. In the sentences below, the indirect object is bold, and the direct object italicized:Give me your phone number.Tell your sister the answer to the first question.Please find the dog a new kennel.The indirect object can generally be replaced using a preposition:Give your phone number to me. ["To me" is a prepositional phrase.]Please find a new kennel for the dog. ["For the dog" is a prepositional phrase.]and a direct object is usually a name of a thing and an indirect object is a name of a person
I am very curious about ............... Fill in the blanks
i was very curious about winter
sometimes
Yes she was very curious
He was very curious about electricity and inventing
Actually, there is. Any object with mass has gravity. In fact, even your body has a very, very tiny amount of gravity.
the adverb for curious is seriously because when you use that in curious it suits very much...
The pronoun 'it' can be a subject, direct object, or indirect object in a sentence.Examples:The book is very popular. It was on the best seller list. (subject)That's a great idea. You should present it to the board. (direct object)A bird landed near me so I gave it a bit of my bread. (indirect object)