From a mathematical point of view, this comes out as (TxT+T) / 3T T2 + T / 3T 1/3T + 1/3 Well....no luck. I believe there is a more riddle-type answer like this: LOheadVE heels (head over heels in love).
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In the King James version the phrase - he gave - appears 79 times the phrase - she gave - appears 6 times
The direct object is 'pen', which she gave to Alex. If Alex were the direct object, the phrase 'Jennifer gave Alex...' would mean that she gave Alex to someone or something.
No
No. It would be "her and me" or "she and I", depending on whether the people in the phrase are the subject or the object. She and I go to concerts together. Our friends gave a great party for her and me.
you gave me the wrong answer nitwit
I really gave him a piece of my mind
Fathoms.
joyful shout
Winston Churchill coined this phrase
if someone died and has a car how can you find out who it is titled to
Yes, an indirect object can be located within a prepositional phrase in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "He gave the book to her," "her" is the indirect object located within the prepositional phrase "to her."