Assuming you mean the charter of the League of Nations, Republicans objected because it obligated the U.S. to defend member nations if they were attacked.
This phrase is compromised of a few different parts of speech. Asking: verb For: preposition A: Adjective/article vote: noun/ object of the preposition
Did she get a college degree? (She did get a college degree)Did - auxiliary verb;she - personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;get - main verb;a - indefinite article;college - attributive noun, describes the noun 'degree';degree - noun, direct object of the verb 'did get'.
The sentence...The rain fell against the window....contains several parts of speech. The (article) rain (subject/noun) fell (verb) against the window. (prepositional phrase) against (preposition) the (article) window (object of the preposition/noun)
The meaning of reference as a noun is the action of mentoring or alluding to something. The term is also a verb that means to provide citations of authorities for an article or book.
The phrase "stole a glance" is not one particular part of speech. It is made up of three different words and three different parts. Stole: verb A: adjective/article Glance: noun/ direct object
[object Object]
[object Object]
Yes, the direct object can be an article + an adjective + noun. Example:Francine wore a new dress.
No, there is no indirect object in the sentence "the reading assignment was an informative article about medical ethics." The sentence provides information about the reading assignment and the article, but it does not include an indirect object receiving the action.
A = article multitude = subject (noun) of = preposition the = article heavenly = adjective hosts = object of the preposition was = predicate (verb) with = preposition the - article angel - object of the preposition
Pilate = subject wrote = predicate an = article inscription = direct object on = preposition the = article cross = object of the preposition
A synonym for the word "article" is "piece" or "post."
Seismologist is a noun, and as with any noun, you need a verb and perhaps an object, and possibly an article. A seismologist measures earthquakes. article noun verb object
Poor - adjective shepherds - subject heard - predicate the - article songs - direct object of - preposition the - article angels - object of the preposition
The noun article is aconcrete nounas a word for a separate part of a document dealing with a single subject; a piece of writing on a particular subject published in a newspaper or magazine; a particular item or object of a specified type (an article of clothing). In grammar, an article is a word that shows whether you are referring to a particular thing or a general example of something. The articles are the indefinite articles 'a' or 'an', and the definite article 'the'.The word article is not abstract, it refers to a concrete object, even it is a printed story in a magazine, it is still an actual object, not a concept.
A direct object is often preceded by an adjective or an article. Some examples:Possessive adjective: We saw our teacher at the mall.Definite article: John made the bus driver wait.Indefinite article: Jane brought a friend to the picnic.Indefinite article: You have an actor waiting to audition.Indefinite article and adjective: They have a beautiful baby.No article or adjective: I had Jane over for lunch today.Sometimes a clause can come between the verb and the direct object:Today in class I introduced, with my teacher's permission to do so, my cousin from Italy.
Examples: an article in a shop, an object in a catalog, a mechanical part, etc.