yes because it's an action
gave is a verb, an action word. pronoun relates to the person such as me, I, his etc
No, "gave' is the past of the verb "give".
A direct object tells what the verb did. She gave him the book. The verb is gave. What did the verb gave actually do. Did she give the boy? Did she give the boy to Sally? No. She gave the book. So the direct object describes what the verb actually did. The verb give involved the book. The book is the direct object. What happened to the book? She gave the direct object, the book, to the indirect object, the boy.
There is no subject complement because there is no linking verb. Gave is an action verb.
action verb because you did this action (sent)
The verb 'gave' is an action verb (past tense of 'give'); a word for the act of giving.
gave is a verb, an action word. pronoun relates to the person such as me, I, his etc
No it's an action verb.
No, "gave' is the past of the verb "give".
Yes
A noun that receives the action verb would be the indirect object! That may seem strange. Let's work it out. He gave John the book. Who did the action? He did the action. He is the subject. What action was done? He Gave. Gave is the action done. What did he give? He gave the book. Book is the direct object. Who received the book? John received the book? John is the indirect object! Book is the direct object. It is the item on which the action is performed.
Yes, you could describe it that way. The act of giving is a visible action.
In the sentence "Later in the day Beth gave you the report," the transitive verb is "gave." A transitive verb is one that requires a direct object to complete its meaning, and in this case, "the report" is the direct object receiving the action of the verb "gave."
Gave is a verb. 'John gave a book to Joe.' In this sentence, John is the subject and gave is the verb.
It is an action verb.
The direct object is the word that receives the action of the verb. Examples:The dog chased the cat. ('cat' is the direct object of the verb 'chased')The cat caught a mouse. ('mouse' is the direct object of the verb 'caught')Who ate the cookies? ('cookies' is the direct object of the verb 'ate')I gave the cake to him. ('cake' is the direct object, it directly receives the action of the verb 'gave'; him is the indirect object, object of the preposition 'to')I gave the dog a bone. ('bone' is the direct object of the verb 'gave'; 'dog' is the indirect object)
A direct object tells what the verb did. She gave him the book. The verb is gave. What did the verb gave actually do. Did she give the boy? Did she give the boy to Sally? No. She gave the book. So the direct object describes what the verb actually did. The verb give involved the book. The book is the direct object. What happened to the book? She gave the direct object, the book, to the indirect object, the boy.