love direct object
The boy kicked the ball. The boy is the subject, kicked is the verb and the ball is the direct object We drank water. We is the subject, drank is the verb and water the direct object. They sent him a letter. This is really They sent a letter to him. They is the subject, sent the verb and a letter is the direct object. to him is the indirect object.
The noun clause 'that I love you' is the indirect object of the verb 'tell'.
love
Yes. It is a complete thought, containing a subject, verb, and direct object.
The word 'euphemism' is a noun, a word for a mild or indirect word or expression substituted for one considered to be too harsh or blunt, unpleasant or embarrassing.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:A euphemism can't minimize the fact that he is dead. (subject of the sentence)Caution, the word love can be a euphemism for ownership and control. (direct object of the verb 'can be')
There is no indirect object. Teacher is the subject, gave is the verb, love is the direct object, and to the children is the prep phrase.
I gave her the love letter. Or, I gave the love letter to her.In both sentences, the direct object of the verb 'gave' is the noun 'letter' and the indirect object is the pronoun 'her'.
The boy kicked the ball. The boy is the subject, kicked is the verb and the ball is the direct object We drank water. We is the subject, drank is the verb and water the direct object. They sent him a letter. This is really They sent a letter to him. They is the subject, sent the verb and a letter is the direct object. to him is the indirect object.
When you are trying to say "I love you" you conjugate querer in the yo form because you are the one doing the loving. Then you want to answer the question of who or what do I love? Therefore, you use a direct object pronoun to answer this question. Since te is the direct object pronoun for the tú form, that is what you use.
It depends on who you are, in my opinion it should be direct.
S stands for subject, TV stands for transitive verb, IO stands for indirect object, and O stands for direct object and the direct object (O) in the outer object. The indirect object appears after the following verbs: give, make, take, send, mail, hand, tell, lend, read, show, bring, sell, serve, and the like. Your test for the indirect object in that it can be converted into the object of the preposition to or for. Example: S TV O (obj. of the prep) The ladies gave their love to Prince Bantugan. (Prince Bantugan is the object of the preposition to.) S TV IO O The ladies gave Prince Bantugan their love. (Prince Bantugan is the indirect object; the preposition to has been omitted.)
The direct object of the verb 'love' is hockey.
The object can be the direct object of an infinitive:I love to sing one and all of the old songs.Or the indirect object of an infinitive:I want to give you and her a party.And the object of a preposition:I'd like to announce to everyone and anyone that we are engaged.
Tecnically, there are two nouns in the sentence: You love blueberry pie; Them being You and pie. The subject is you, the verb is love, blueberry is an adjective describing pie, and pie is the indirect object (not completely sure about pie... it could be the direct object instead)
The noun clause 'that I love you' is the indirect object of the verb 'tell'.
Wrong grammar! anata o aishiteru is the right grammar. Anata means you (commonly used by females) or it can be used for older partners(wife,husband), o = Direct object indicator, aishiteru means I love you. So "anata o aishiteru" means I love you dear/ I love you.
Love is a lyrical topic so you should check the lyrics if there is a direct or indirect love topic in them.