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Dinner because it is the object of the verb "ate". Ate what? Ate dinner.
Sounds like she/he ate something bad keep an eye on him/her if more vomiting goes on call vet asap
dinner
Most likely, it could also be that you're just sick
While you ate dinner, you admired your new china.
A nonessential phrase is a phrase in a sentence that doesn't need to be there. For example; The boy, who just ate dinner, wrote that story. No one needs to know that the boy just ate dinner. Who just ate dinner is a nonessential phrase.
Lions eat what they ate for lunch and what they ate for dinner.
A direct object is a part of a sentence, and not a part of speech. Dinner is a noun. Whether or not it is a direct object depends on how it is used. "Dinner was good." Here, dinner is a subject. (Something was good. What was good? Dinner.) "I ate dinner." Here, dinner is a direct object. (I ate something. What did you eat? Dinner.) "I like eating cashews with my dinner." Here, dinner is the object of a preposition. (I ate cashews with something. With what? With dinner.) As you see, nouns have many uses in the English language, and a direct object is but one of them.
Dog ingested a mirapex .25mg tablet. He vomited 3 times. What should I do?
She sloppily ate the dinner.
We ate at eight. I ate eight mushrooms. Eight people sat at the table and ate dinner.
some time