clothes
The plural noun sweaters can be used as a subject, a direct object, an indirect object, or the object of a preposition; for example: Subject: The sweaters are for school. Direct Object: We bought sweaters for school. Indirect Object: Dad will make the sweaters a shelf in my closet. Object of a Preposition: Dad will make a shelf for the sweaters.
The direct object in the sentence "students go to school" is "school," as it is the receiver of the action of going.
School clothes can be bought at almost any stores that sells children's clothing. Some popular stores include Target, Walmart, Kmart, Children's Place, The Gap, and Sears.
In the sentence "I go to school," "school" is a prepositional object of the preposition "to." It functions as an indirect object indicating the destination of the action of going.
school- indirect object
The direct object in the sentence is "us," as it is the object that is being acted upon by the verb "drove."
It depends on how it is used: In "I smacked the editor with my rejected manuscript", "editor" is a direct object. In "I was the editor of my school paper" or "The editor made some excellent suggestions", "editor" is not a direct object.
The direct object in the sentence is "us." It is the recipient of the action of the verb "drove."
The direct object in the sentence is "us," as it is the recipient of the action of the verb "drove."
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.
Yes, "Justin and Kenneth" is the direct object in the sentence "You saw Justin and Kenneth at school yesterday." They are what the subject "you" saw.
The direct object in the sentence is "us," as it is the recipient of the action of being driven by Mrs. Chang.