indirect
yes yes it did :P u smart a**
A plus= predicate adjective
The word 'dancer' is a noun.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb (direct or indirect) or a preposition.A noun also functions as a predicate nominative.Examples:A dancer was exercising at the bar. (subject of the sentence)The costume that the dancer wore was covered in spangles. (subject of the relative clause)I know that dancer from the rehearsal hall. (direct object of the verb 'know')They brought the dancer flowers for her dressing room. (indirect object of the verb 'brought')There was a standing ovation for the dancer. (object of the preposition 'for')Michael Jackson was an excellent dancer. (predicate nominative)
A subject follows a linking or action verb. A predicate noun or predicate adjective can follow a linking verb. An indirect object is the noun that can follow an action verb.
indirect objects Allie---object complement A+LS Australian Shepard----- Direct object A+LS (:
The word 'Sidney' is a proper noun, the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun, a name can be uses as a subject, a direct object, an indirect object, a predicate nominative, or an objective complement. A predicate adjective is normally an adjective, not a noun.
indirect object
Direct objects receive the action of the verb.Carl built a house. (a house is the direct object)Indirect objects receive the direct object.Martha handed me her hat. (her hat is the direct object; me is the indirect object)Predicate nominatives and predicate adjectives follow a linking verb and rename or describe the subject.Carl is a carpenter. (a carpenter is the predicate nominative)Martha is happy. (happy is the predicate adjective)
The noun 'dog' is B, the direct object of the verb 'gave'.
yes yes it did :P u smart a**
A plus= predicate adjective
The word 'dancer' is a noun.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb (direct or indirect) or a preposition.A noun also functions as a predicate nominative.Examples:A dancer was exercising at the bar. (subject of the sentence)The costume that the dancer wore was covered in spangles. (subject of the relative clause)I know that dancer from the rehearsal hall. (direct object of the verb 'know')They brought the dancer flowers for her dressing room. (indirect object of the verb 'brought')There was a standing ovation for the dancer. (object of the preposition 'for')Michael Jackson was an excellent dancer. (predicate nominative)
The word 'music' is a noun.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb (direct or indirect) or a preposition. A noun also functions as a predicate nominative.Examples:The music from the block party filled the neighborhood. (subject of the sentence)I couldn't decide which music to play. (subject of the relative clause)I heard music coming from his room. (direct object of the verb 'heard')Grandma tapped her foot to the music. (object of the preposition 'to')The manager's compliment was music to my ears. (predicate nominative)
A subject follows a linking or action verb. A predicate noun or predicate adjective can follow a linking verb. An indirect object is the noun that can follow an action verb.
A noun can be used in a sentence as the subject of the sentence or of a clause within the sentence, as the object or indirect object of a transitive verb or its present participle used as a gerund in the sentence, as the objective complement (or predicate nominative) of a linking verb or its gerund, as the object of a preposition, as the subject or object of an infinitive, as a nominative of address, as an appositive, or as a nominative absolute.
It cannot. The pronoun "I" is the nominative case, and objects (direct and indirect) must be the subjective case, which is "me."Where a linking verb is used, such as to be, the nominative is properly used as the predicate nominative (e.g. It was I who shot the bandit). Without a clause, however, many people will use the subjective (e.g. It was me) and there are even style guides that include an unsupported rule to that effect.
indirect objects Allie---object complement A+LS Australian Shepard----- Direct object A+LS (: