The noun 'story' can be used for any function of a noun, the subject of a sentence, the direct object or indirect object of a verb, and the object of a preposition. Examples:
Subject: The story was a good one.
Direct object: Grandma told a story of her childhood.
Indirect object: What is the name of the story? (object of the preposition 'of')
"The class" is the indirect object. In English, the indirect object is usually something that could also be expressed by putting "to" in front of it. The sentence could be rephrased "The teacher told a story to the class."
There is no indirect object; the direct object is 'it' (immediately is an adverb modifying the verb spent).
Yes. In fact, a sentence must have a direct object in order to have an indirect object. (Note, however, that some consider the subject of a sentence in the passive voice to be an "implicit" indirect object, because it the sentence is changed to the active voice, the subject in the passive voice will often become an indirect object in the active voice.)
The indirect object pronoun for ustedes is "les".
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)
indirect object - miguel. direct object - story
The same objective pronouns are used whether for the direct or indirect object. Example:She told me a story. The word "me" is an indirect object pronoun; the direct object is the noun story.
The indirect object is 'the class'; the direct object is 'story'. Mrs. B. reads story.
"The class" is the indirect object. In English, the indirect object is usually something that could also be expressed by putting "to" in front of it. The sentence could be rephrased "The teacher told a story to the class."
the story.
The indirect object is "you" in the sentence "What gave you the idea for your story?" It indicates to whom the idea was given or for whom the idea was intended.
It might be, but you can't tell without seeing how it is used in the sentence. Us is an object, but it can be either an indirect object or a direct object, depending on context. For example, in "Tell us a story", us is an indirect object. But in "They robbed us", us is a direct object.
This sentence can be diagrammed as follows: Subject (Ellen) - Verb (told) - Direct Object (the story) - Indirect Object (David).
indirect object
indirect object
There is no indirect object; the direct object is 'it' (immediately is an adverb modifying the verb spent).
"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."