An indirect object can be modified by adverbs or prepositional phrases to provide additional information about the action being performed on the indirect object.
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No, an indirect object is usually preceded by a preposition and receives the direct object. Adverbs and adjectives modify verbs and nouns, respectively, but not typically indirect objects.
"May" can function as a modal verb indicating possibility or permission. It is not an indirect object, subject, direct object, or verb phrase.
Yes, an indirect object can come after a direct object in a sentence. For example, "She gave her friend a gift" where "a gift" is the direct object and "her friend" is the indirect object.
No, "them" is a pronoun typically used as an indirect object or an object of a preposition in a sentence. A direct object receives the action of the verb directly.
The indirect object in the sentence is "it." It is the recipient of the direct object "spent," which is an action being done to the indirect object.