it's not morey because the person is not a predicate
it's D.met because a predicate is a verb and the verb in this sentence is met
The predicate is the verb which describes the action. In other words what did Lucy and Neil (the subjects) do? They MET Morey, right? So what they did was: MET. Your answer is MET.
the verb wrecked is transitive with the direct object being bike
"Did your husband work the whole night last night?" "Your husband worked the whole night last night."
Wind and night are nouns. For the most part a noun is an object - something you can touch or feel. A noun can also be a name, and sometimes even an intangible object or feeling (e.g. love). This means in the sentence provided the nouns are 'wind' and 'night'. The wind is something you can feel. The night is also classified as an object (however large it may be). 'Cold' is an adjective - it describes the noun (the wind). 'Blew' is a verb - it tells us what the wind did.
last night, yesterday evening
"Morey" is the object because that is the person whom they meet.
The predicate is the verb which describes the action. In other words what did Lucy and Neil (the subjects) do? They MET Morey, right? So what they did was: MET. Your answer is MET.
Ireland
Ireland and Scotland
The sun
Cherry at the movies.
A noun or a pronoun can be the object of a relative clause. Example:The person who called Sarah last night will call again today.The person who called you last night will call again today.A relative clause does not necessarily have an object, it only needs a subject and a verb:The person who called will call again tomorrow.
A clause used as the object of a preposition is called a noun clause. A noun clause takes the role of a noun. In the sentence, "I do not know anything except what I saw last night. " The preposition is "except" and its object is the noun clause "what I saw last night".
night is the noun last is an adjective
the verb wrecked is transitive with the direct object being bike
"Did your husband work the whole night last night?" "Your husband worked the whole night last night."
"Last night" is correct. "Yesterday night" is not commonly used and may be considered incorrect in some contexts.