There is no object of the preposition in this sentence because there is no preposition.
Joe sliced an apple on the table.
In this sentence the table is the object of the preposition on.
The object of the preposition is "apple." The preposition "an" shows the relationship between the verb "sliced" and its object, which is "apple."
Whom is used when the question you are asking refers to the direct object of a sentence. It is often helpful to think of what the answer is. If the answer will be the direct object, whom is needed. If the answer is the subject of the sentence, who is needed. Ex. Who is going to the party? Bob is going to the party. (Bob is the subject of the sentence.) Ex. Whom are you taking with to the party? I am taking Joe to the party. (I is now the subject of the sentence, and Joe is the direct object.)
In the sentence "Joe owes Jim five bucks," "Jim" is the indirect object (receives the action indirectly) and "five bucks" is the direct object (receives the action directly). There is nothing grammatically wrong in this sentence.
Transitive and intransitive refer to how verbs relate to their objects. A transitive verb requires a direct object to complete its meaning, while an intransitive verb does not require a direct object. For example, in the sentence "She ate the apple," "ate" is transitive because it needs the direct object "apple" to make sense. In contrast, in the sentence "He sleeps," "sleeps" is intransitive because it does not require a direct object.
Yes, a compound indirect object sentence can include multiple indirect objects that receive the action of the verb. For example, "She gave me and him the book" has "me" and "him" as indirect objects receiving the action of "gave."
The basic sentence patterns are Subject-Verb (SV), Subject-Verb-Object (SVO), Subject-Verb-Adjective (SVA), Subject-Verb-Adverb (SAdv), Subject-Verb-Indirect Object-Direct Object (SVOIO), Subject-Verb-Object-Complement (SVOC), Subject-Verb-Direct Object-Indirect Object (SVDOI), and Subject-Verb-Object-Object (SVOO). Each pattern represents the different ways in which subjects, verbs, objects, and complements can be ordered in a sentence.
yes, Joe likes apple, and nutella too.
Penn State Nittany Lions. FACT: Joe Pa is older than sliced bread
Joe Hudson
[object Object]
apple pie
Joe Jonas.
joe says his trademark object is head bands
There is no pronoun in your sentence: Joe is a noun (the subject). wanted to be is the verb. a is the article modifying the object noun. meteorologist is a noun (the object).
Joe Jonas
A compound indirect object functions exactly the same as a single indirect object:Marcy sold Joe and his little brother three pizzas for her fundraiser.Marcy is the subject. Pizza is the direct object. Who did she sell them to? Joe and his little brother. Joe and brother are both indirect objects.
red delicious
Whom is used when the question you are asking refers to the direct object of a sentence. It is often helpful to think of what the answer is. If the answer will be the direct object, whom is needed. If the answer is the subject of the sentence, who is needed. Ex. Who is going to the party? Bob is going to the party. (Bob is the subject of the sentence.) Ex. Whom are you taking with to the party? I am taking Joe to the party. (I is now the subject of the sentence, and Joe is the direct object.)