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Dinner because it is the object of the verb "ate". Ate what? Ate dinner.
Sounds like she/he ate something bad keep an eye on him/her if more vomiting goes on call vet asap
dinner
Most likely, it could also be that you're just sick
While you ate dinner, you admired your new china.
The conjunction but should go into the blank space:Bob ate a large dinner but he is still hungry.
A nonessential phrase is a phrase in a sentence that doesn't need to be there. For example; The boy, who just ate dinner, wrote that story. No one needs to know that the boy just ate dinner. Who just ate dinner is a nonessential phrase.
Dog ingested a mirapex .25mg tablet. He vomited 3 times. What should I do?
She sloppily ate the dinner.
A direct object is a part of a sentence, and not a part of speech. Dinner is a noun. Whether or not it is a direct object depends on how it is used. "Dinner was good." Here, dinner is a subject. (Something was good. What was good? Dinner.) "I ate dinner." Here, dinner is a direct object. (I ate something. What did you eat? Dinner.) "I like eating cashews with my dinner." Here, dinner is the object of a preposition. (I ate cashews with something. With what? With dinner.) As you see, nouns have many uses in the English language, and a direct object is but one of them.
We ate at eight. I ate eight mushrooms. Eight people sat at the table and ate dinner.
some time