it is a direct
There is no indirect object. Teacher is the subject, gave is the verb, love is the direct object, and to the children is the prep phrase.
No, there is no indirect object in the sentence "The city closed your street during the construction." The city is the subject, "closed" is the verb, "your street" is the direct object, and "during the construction" is a prepositional phrase.
The nouns in a sentence are usually the subject of the subject and the object of the sentence or phrase. However a sentence may have no nouns at all. Example: You didn't give me any. In this example, the subject the object and the indirect object are all pronouns.In your question: Where might you likely find nouns in a sentence? The nouns in this sentence are the direct and indirect objects of the sentence.In the answer to the question: Nouns are usually the subject and object of the sentence or phrase. The nouns in this sentence are the subject, the direct object, and the indirect object of the sentence.
The indirect object always comes before the direct object. Also the indirect object can be made into a phrase using to or for.I gave the dog a bone. -- The verb is gave, if you ask the question what did I give? the answer is a bonethis is the direct object, the dog is the indirect object.I gave a bone to the dog. -- the indirect object is made into a phrase using to
Direct objects answer the question "what" and Indierect object answer the question for whomI bought Jack a phone. I gave Jack the phone.In these sentences Jack is the indirect object. The indirect object goes before the direct object. Phone is the direct object.The indirect object can be changed into a phrase using toor for.I gave the phone to Jack.and:I bought a phone for Jack
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
The noun 'pen' can be the subject, the direct object, or the indirect object of a sentence or phrase. Examples:Subject: The pen is out of ink.Object: I need a new pen.Indirect Object: The sheep are behind the barn in a pen.
There is no indirect object. Teacher is the subject, gave is the verb, love is the direct object, and to the children is the prep phrase.
No, there is no indirect object in the sentence "The city closed your street during the construction." The city is the subject, "closed" is the verb, "your street" is the direct object, and "during the construction" is a prepositional phrase.
Object pronouns are the pronouns that can only be used as the direct object or an indirect object of a sentence or phrase. The direct object pronouns are pronouns that are being used as the direct object of a sentence.The object pronouns are me, him, her, us, them, whom, whomever.There are some pronouns that can be subject or object pronouns; they are you, it, which, that, what, everybody.
The nouns in a sentence are usually the subject of the subject and the object of the sentence or phrase. However a sentence may have no nouns at all. Example: You didn't give me any. In this example, the subject the object and the indirect object are all pronouns.In your question: Where might you likely find nouns in a sentence? The nouns in this sentence are the direct and indirect objects of the sentence.In the answer to the question: Nouns are usually the subject and object of the sentence or phrase. The nouns in this sentence are the subject, the direct object, and the indirect object of the sentence.
The indirect object always comes before the direct object. Also the indirect object can be made into a phrase using to or for.I gave the dog a bone. -- The verb is gave, if you ask the question what did I give? the answer is a bonethis is the direct object, the dog is the indirect object.I gave a bone to the dog. -- the indirect object is made into a phrase using to
An example of a sentence containing an indirect object:Give me that newspaper.In this sentence, "that newspaper" is what is actually given, and is the direct object. But what about the word "me"? It is the indirect object.The indirect object comes before the direct object. It could be replaced by "to me", but when you replace the indirect object by a prepositional phrase like that, you have to rearrange the sentence, putting the direct object immediately after the verb:Give that newspaper to me.Some other examples (with the indirect object in bold):Tell your sister what happened this morning.Pay them $20 each.Show the doctor your finger.**marnie gave mother the wallet she found
Yes, a person can be the direct object of a sentence or phrase; a person can also be an indirect object of a sentence or phrase. Examples:Direct object: He brought his sister to the party.Indirect object: He bought a new car for his wife.
No. "Prometheus" is the subject, "stole" is the transitive verb, "fire" is the direct object, and "from the Olympians" is a prepositional phrase with "from" as the preposition and "Olympians" as the object of the preposition.
Direct objects answer the question "what" and Indierect object answer the question for whomI bought Jack a phone. I gave Jack the phone.In these sentences Jack is the indirect object. The indirect object goes before the direct object. Phone is the direct object.The indirect object can be changed into a phrase using toor for.I gave the phone to Jack.and:I bought a phone for Jack
In object replacement, the order is always indirect and then direct. In a negative command the sentence structure is "No, Indirect Object, Direct Object, Verb Phrase". It is the same order as a sentence with a regular indicative verb.