Yes.
The noun or pronoun for the blank space is objective, direct object of the verb 'told' (...when she told John and me... or ...when she told us...).John and me is the compound objective case.
The only time a verb is not a verb is when you are literally using the word 'verb' in the sentence. Example: The teacher told us to recognize the verb in the sentence. Noun(s): teacher, us, verb, sentence Verb(s): told
A verb is what the noun is doing. So let's take this sentence and examine it:She seemed very happy to see us.Before figuring out the verb, we need to find the noun. A noun is a person, place, or thing, so the noun in this sentence is "she." (Actually, "she" is a pronoun, which is something like he, she it, they, etc. that replaces the noun- the noun would normally be something like the name of the person.) However, in this sentence it's the "she" that's doing the doing.Now that we have what we need to figure out the verb, and we know what a verb is, what is the verb in this sentence? You need to ask yourself, what is "she" doing? Or, in this case, what did "she" do? She seemed. She seemed very happy to see us.If you've learned anything from this, then you know that there is another verb in this sentence, in its infinitive form. In this sentence, what is another word that is something someone can do? No one can do "us", and no one can do "happy." So the second verb is see. It's an infinitive verb because it has "to" in front of it, making it unconjugated.
In the sentence, "Can Shalini help us?", the first person, plural, personal pronoun us is the direct object of the verb 'help'.
Our teacher told us to classify the 112 elements.
No, the correct sentence would be: "He told us they were going to do it." This is because the reporting verb "told" is in the past tense, so the verb "are" should be transformed to the past tense "were" as well.
"goes" as this the the word of action that tells us what someone is doing.
He told it to us. = active sentence.It was told to us by him. = passive sentence.
" John told us that him and Scott were playing at his house."No, the sentence is not correct. The personal pronoun 'him' is the objective form used as the subject of the verb 'were playing'.The correct subjective pronoun is: "John told us that he and Scott were playing at his house."
The noun or pronoun for the blank space is objective, direct object of the verb 'told' (...when she told John and me... or ...when she told us...).John and me is the compound objective case.
The verb in the sentence is: will wiltThe main verb is 'wilt'.The modal auxiliary verb is 'will', which shows us the sentence is about the future.
The sentence needs an agent (someone to perform the action of the verb)."We expected the convict to shoot at us" is active voice. We is the agent.People expected that the convict would shoot at us.
Told us you needed three books is not a complete sentence. It lacks a subject. For example, adding I, she, he, a person's name or a title would make this a complete sentence. Examples: He told us you needed three books. She told us you needed three books. Mrs. Krammer told us you needed three books. The teacher told us you needed three books.
The verb in the sentence is "is preparing," which is the present continuous form of the verb "prepare." It indicates that Jesus is currently in the process of preparing a mansion for us in Heaven.
The American falls lies within the US. Has one direct verb. Lies.
The only time a verb is not a verb is when you are literally using the word 'verb' in the sentence. Example: The teacher told us to recognize the verb in the sentence. Noun(s): teacher, us, verb, sentence Verb(s): told
A "patriot" is an individual who strongly identifies with his nation, country, or government. In the US, the term is applied historically to the people of the US colonies who fought for independence from England in the Revolutionary War. (someone who loves, supports, and defends their country)