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it is a direct
Yes. We may say Give me the book or Give the book to me.
Yes, in a sentence with both a direct and indirect object, the indirect object typically precedes the direct object. For example, in the sentence "She gave him a book," "him" is the indirect object and "book" is the direct object.
It may be. Pronouns in the objective case may be direct objects or indirect objects.
I gave my dog a bone ('my dog' = indirect object; 'a bone' = direct object). They called me a taxi. (taxi - direct object, me- indirect object)
Yes, an indirect object can be modified by the article "an".Examples:He gave an orangutan an orange.We paid an accountant fifty dollars to complete our tax forms.
Objects are usually nouns or noun phrases. Adverbs modify verbs. So no.
A sentence must have a subject and a main verb. It may also have an indirect object: This book is for you.
it is a direct
indirect object
indirect object
"You" can be either a direct or indirect object: It is a direct object in "I want to kiss you." It is an indirect object in "Henry is going to give you the tickets."
A compound indirect object is more than one indirect object. "We gave Martha and Bob many presents." ("presents" is the direct object, "Martha and Bob" is the compound indirect object)
The direct object is "you"; the indirect object (I believe) is "this".
Yes. We may say Give me the book or Give the book to me.
Yes, in a sentence with both a direct and indirect object, the indirect object typically precedes the direct object. For example, in the sentence "She gave him a book," "him" is the indirect object and "book" is the direct object.
An indirect object is always a noun (or an equivalent phrase). I gave the dog a bone -- "the dog" is the indirect object.