No.
c. gerorge was furious
Two kinds of verbs are transitive and intransitive. A transitive verb has a direct object. He gave her a kiss. What did he do? He gave. What did he give? He gave a kiss. Kiss is the direct object. To whom did he give it? To her. She is the indirect object. An intransitive verb does not have a direct object. He walked away. What did he do? He walked. Away is an adverb; it is not a noun. It is not a direct object. Walked is an intransitive verb.
Is. Since the word "is" is a passive verb, it needs a direct object to complete the sentence. The Direct object is "restaurant". Stripping away the adjectives and adverbs, the sentence will read..."McDonalds is(a or the) restaurant.
"Go away" does not have a direct object. "Go" is a verb, and "away" is an adverb.
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.
D They won the game.
Example sentence - We walked away from her as she bragged about nothing.
In the sentence, "You gave them a going away party.", the pronoun you is the subject of the sentence; the pronoun them is the indirect object of the verb 'gave'.
In a sentence, the adjectives are the words that describe the objects. Adjectives can describe how an object feels, looks, sounds, tastes, or smells.
The word 'decade' is a noun, a word for a period of ten years or a group of ten.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example sentences:The decade of that hairstyle gives my age away. (subject of the sentence)It has been a decade since I last saw her. (direct object of the verb 'has been')
By finding the prepositional phrase/s, you take away "unnecessary" parts of the sentence. Prepositional phrases add to the sentence, but they can be taken out in order to isolate the subject, verb, and direct object (if there is one.) Example: I love to play at the park. Now take out the prepositional phrase. I love to play. What's the verb? Love. I is the subject, and play is the direct object.
There are two pronouns in the sentence, "She threw it away."she = subject of the sentence (she takes the place of a noun for a female)it = object of the verb (it takes the place of a noun for a thing)