-
Okay, the thing to remember is that people are one of two things in a sentence. Either they do something (nominative or subjective) or something is done to them (objective). Who is always a subject; whom is always an object. Which and that vary by
-
How would you analize this sentence?
Which are the subj,the verb and the object?
"Tell him to come"
'Tell him to come' is a command (imperative) where the subject 'you' is omitted because it is
-
How can I tell, since the above way is floored flawed? You don't seem to need a way to tell. You've figured them out on your own. So am I right to say that 'them' in both are indirect objects and the noun clauses are direct
-
Quote from a site:
To determine if a verb has a direct object , isolate the verb and make it into a question by placing "whom?" or "what?" after it. The answer, if there is one, is the direct object.
I asked them
-
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
224 days ago
Dates, Clauses, Nouns, Adverbs, Gerunds, Predicates, Direct Objects, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Indirect, Objects, Languages
-
Hi Elizabeth
Re: 'He asked her to dance'.
That was a great reply to something that I too was unsure about. If I understand you correctly, that example is analysed as: 'He - asked - ' i.e. S-V- , where O is an
-
Tom ( call) is going to call when Correct. Could also be Tom will call but since there's no indirect object such as me in this clause, the longer structure is going to call may sound better to many. I ( call) will call you as soon as I
-
simpler to separate clauses on the basis of identifying conjunctions sentences are clauses separated by conjunctions each clause then has a subject(noun) one verb and an object(noun) and or indirect object(noun) and or a preposition the noun may
misc.education.language.english
by
stan vincent
332 days ago
Nouns, Prepositions, Clauses, Gerunds, Adverbs, Auxiliaries, Sentences, Writing, Adjectives, Objects, Indirect
-
from marks the source argument of the three-argument form of the verb borrow. BORROW (borrower, thing borrowed, source of the borrowing). I don't see from him as adverbial. It's simply a constituent of the main clause, the same way that
-
Hello: Could someone please explain subject and object noun clauses to me? Here are some example sentences that I need to identify the subject and object noun clauses for: We regret we don't see you often. It seems clear that the plan is
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|