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subject,direct object,indirect object,predicate nominative,objcet of a preposition,direct address,appositive,or an abjective complement.
These terms describe the functions that words take when used in sentences . They are not properties of
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i have to label the simple subjects, verb or verb phrases, direct objects, indirect objects, and predicate nouns. Then I have to bracket any prepositional phrases and label the objects of the prepositions. Here is the sentence: Susie and I
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No one - subject said - verb that it would be easy - direct object The verb and direct object together form the predicate. The direct object is itself a subordinate clause: it - subject would be - verb easy - predicate adjective The verb and
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When we arrived at the dock, the captain told Harry and us where to park our cars . subject verb direct object There is no predicate nominative in the sentence. CJ
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I think subject is the captain and the predicate is told harry and us where to park our cars and the direct object is Harry and us .
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What is the subject, verb, and predicate nominative or direct object or this sentence? When we arrived at the dock the captain told Harry and (we,us) where to park our cars.
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Hello, We don't split verb phrases like "must have been sleeping" because the whole phrase is acting together as the verb. (But, in this example, you could choose to see "sleeping" as a gerund acting as the predicate noun
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
109 days ago
Dates, Clauses, Nouns, Adverbs, Gerunds, Predicates, Direct Objects, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Indirect, Objects, Languages
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Have you ever seen the movie "Peggy Sue Got Married"? Peggy Sue was a middle-aged woman who passes out at her high school reunion and wakes up 25 years in the past, when she's a high school student again - but with all her adult
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
grammar geek
176 days ago
Nouns, Predicates, Nominative, Marriage, Direct Objects, Relationships, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Students, Classes, Languages
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I am a middle school student studying for a test on identifying nominative, predicate nominatives, indirect objects, and direct objects. I am completely confused. I have no clue how to identify these within a sentance, nor how to use the right
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I hope I made things clearer. Yes. I understand. Sheila coming back or Sheila come back are both non-finite subordinate clauses, and they are, as we established before, direct objects of the main clause. Being direct objects, they are nominal
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