A direct object is usually a noun or a pronoun.
To change an imperative statement from direct to indirect speech, you usually use a reporting verb like "asked" or "told" followed by an indirect object. For example, "Go to the store" in direct speech becomes "He told me to go to the store" in indirect speech.
A direct object follows a transitive verb.
In the sentence "Your visit to the museum was educational", "visit" is the direct object. An indirect object would typically receive the direct object, such as in the sentence "I gave her a gift" where "her" is the indirect object receiving the direct object "gift".
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)
No, the word "note" is not a direct object. In the sentence, it can function as either a noun or a verb but not a direct object. A direct object is a noun or pronoun that receives the action of a verb.
Definition
Each of the "following" statement is neither true nor false.
Solution or a root
Direct
direct
Passive does not have the word order subject + verb + object
direct
False It should read: The amount of matter in an object is its mass (not weight)
There is no direct object. There are two types of verbs: action verbs and being verbs. Being verbs are verbs of being, they are words like "is", "am", "was", "be", and their variations, like "have been", etc. They don't have direct objects. Action verbs are all the other words, that do have actions. The object of that action is the direct object. So, if the verb is making a statement of being, then there is no direct object, and the verb is a verb of being, like "is".
Rachel dyed her hair green. Rachel- subject dyed- verb hair- direct object green-object complement
object
Just replace the word "greater" with the word "less" and you've got yourself a true statement.