An Olympic-sized pool at the Aquatics Center.
In this sentence, "is going to California next summer" is the complete predicate. The simple predicate, or verb, is "is going". Is is the helping verb, to is the preposition, California is the object of the preposition, summer is an adverb answering the question when, and next is an adjective modifying summer, answering which summer. Our is a possessive pronoun, it is also an adjective describing which family, and family is the simple subject.
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).
[object Object]
No, "summer" is not a direct object. In grammar, a direct object is a noun or pronoun that receives the action of the verb in a sentence. "Summer" is a noun that typically refers to a season and does not directly receive the action of a verb. It is not a direct object in the traditional sense of the term.
[object Object]
I think the simile 'Green as a summer pumpkin' describes the type of green in an object. Pumpkins are green when the grow in the summer. That type of green is used as a modifier specifying the certain type of green in an object.
would have worked
bacon is awesome
I think the simile 'Green as a summer pumpkin' describes the type of green in an object. Pumpkins are green when the grow in the summer. That type of green is used as a modifier specifying the certain type of green in an object.
Oil filter wrench, one-half inch socket and orbit sander are tools. They begin with the letter O.
[object Object]
The noun 'summer' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example:Summer is just around the corner. (subject of the sentence)In the heat that summer brings we take refuge in the mountains. (subject of the relative clause)We have the summer to finish the job. (direct object of the verb 'have')What are your plans for summer. (object of the preposition 'for)