"She is insecure" does not have a direct object. "Insecure" is an adjective describing the subject "she".
In the sentence "Your visit to the museum was educational", "visit" is the direct object. An indirect object would typically receive the direct object, such as in the sentence "I gave her a gift" where "her" is the indirect object receiving the direct object "gift".
I believe the answer would be D. They won the game. "They" is the subject, "won" is the verb, and "game" is the direct object.
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).
A direct object can usually be made into the subject of a corresponding passive sentence. E.g., for part of the question asked, a passive form would be "A direct object is not contained by a sentence" which shows that in the original, "a direct object" is the direct object of "contain". So if a noun phrase immediately following the verb cannot be made the subject of a corresponding passive, that is evidence that the noun phrase is not a direct object. For instance, "a ghost" is not a direct object in "I am now a ghost", since you cannot form a passive construction *"A ghost is now been by me." Likewise, "a fish" is not a direct object in "He became a fish", because *"A fish was become by him" is no good.
The direct object is 'pen', which she gave to Alex. If Alex were the direct object, the phrase 'Jennifer gave Alex...' would mean that she gave Alex to someone or something.
In the sentence, 'My aunt will give me a videotape.', the direct object is 'videotape', the indirect object is 'me'. will give -> videotape (to me)
The direct object in the sentence"The usher found us seats near the stage."; would be seats. The indirect object would be us. My English teacher gave us this question on an exercise, and I think that is the answer.
A transitive verb is used with a direct object. Transitive verbs are action verbs that require a direct object to complete their meaning in a sentence. The direct object is the receiver of the action performed by the verb.
It could certainly be used as a direct object. For example:'Please could you pass me the copy of The Lady which is on the table?'It is less likely to be used as an indirect object. Here is one example:'Please can you add these amendments to the copy of the document which is on my computer?'Correction:In the last sentence above, "copy" is the DIRECT object of the preposition "to". The expression "to the copy" functionssimilarly to an indirect object, but the noun is still technically an direct object."Copy" as an indirect object would be fairly uncommon, but an example would be:I gave the copy a quick scan.[Note: "copy" is also a verb.]
That would be worms. Vibration would be the subject noun, and brings would be the verb. Since the vibration acts upon the worms, worms would be the direct object.
I'm not sure what you are asking here, so if I'm off, I'm sorry. The direct object of that sentence would be -swimming-.
The direct object is 'some advice'. That is the thing that you gave. The indirect object is 'her'. That is the person to whom you gave the thing. In this context it means 'to her', and indeed if you reversed the order of the direct and indirect objects that is what you would say: 'I gave some advice to her.'