"His lawyer" could be a direct object or indirect object, but it could not be an adverb. In "He called his lawyer", "his lawyer" is a direct object.
In "He showed his lawyer the contract", "his lawyer" is an indirect object.
The noun clause "that accused his lawyer of lying" is functioning as the direct object of the verb "accused." It provides more information about the action being performed within the main clause of the sentence.
The direct object of the verb 'protected' is settlers; the object of the preposition 'in' is Texas.
Anyone can object, however getting the change is another thing, unless you can prove a clear conflict of interest.
In court, lawyers generally should not interrupt each other when witnesses are being questioned. Each lawyer has the opportunity to object to questions or raise points during cross-examination or re-examination. Continuous interruption can disrupt proceedings and may be addressed by the judge.
"Servus" is the nominative form of the Latin word meaning "slave" or "servant," while "servum" is the accusative form. "Servus" is used when the word is the subject of a sentence, while "servum" is used when the word is the direct object.
There is no indirect object; the direct object is 'it' (immediately is an adverb modifying the verb spent).
No. You-subject. Spent-verb. It-direct object. ly- adverb.
No, an indirect object is usually preceded by a preposition and receives the direct object. Adverbs and adjectives modify verbs and nouns, respectively, but not typically indirect objects.
"You" can be either a direct or indirect object: It is a direct object in "I want to kiss you." It is an indirect object in "Henry is going to give you the tickets."
No. adverbs and adjectives are modifiers. They modify verbs (adverb) and nouns (adjective).An indirect object could be made up of an adjective and a noun.The dog brought his young master a stick.In this sentence the direct object is stick. The indirect object is master the adjective young modifies the noun master.
The direct object is "you"; the indirect object (I believe) is "this".
A direct or indirect object is a part of a sentence. A single word in isolation is neither a direct or indirect object. However, most nouns can be used in a sentence as either a direct or indirect object.
Direct- food Indirect- dog
I gave my dog a bone ('my dog' = indirect object; 'a bone' = direct object). They called me a taxi. (taxi - direct object, me- indirect object)
This is how you can distinguish/recognize the indirect object from the direct object.The indirect object always goes before the direct object. (direct object is bold / indirect subject is italics)I gave Jim the book.The indirect object can be changed into a phrase beginning with to.I gave the book to Jim
Direct object: his first film. There is no indirect object.
indirect object