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 the verb "drove."
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 being driven by Mrs. Chang.
The direct object in the sentence is "us," as it is the object that is being acted upon by the verb "drove."
Yes, the noun 'yesterday' can function as a direct object, an indirect object, and the object of a preposition.Examples:We enjoyed yesterday at the beach. (direct object of the verb 'enjoyed')We planned a picnic for yesterday but it rained. (object of the preposition 'for')The noun 'yesterday' also functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.The word 'yesterday' is also an adverb.
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 nouns in the sentence are sun and yesterday.The is a definite article.'was shining' is the auxiliary and the main verb.brightly is an adverb.
"you""You" is the direct object of the sentence "Renaldo showed you his skateboard yesterday". This is shown by the grammaticality of a corresponding passive:"You were shown his skateboard by Renaldo yesterday", since being made subject of a passive is a good test for whether a noun phrase is a direct object.But the function of the "you" is that of indirect object, as can be seen in the related sentence "Renaldo showed his skateboard to you yesterday", which has the direct object "his skateboard", and the related passive for this sentence has the original direct object as subject: "His skateboard was shown to you by Renaldo yesterday.So, what has happened here is that the original indirect object, "to you", has be converted into a direct object, "you", which is then subject to passivization.Some speakers of English also accept the passive made by passivizing the old direct object instead of the direct object derived from the indirect object: ?"His skateboard was shown you yesterday by Renaldo".
The direct object in the sentence is "us," as it is the recipient of the action of the verb "drove."
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 being driven by Mrs. Chang.
The direct object in the sentence is "us," as it is the object that is being acted upon by the verb "drove."
Yesterday is a noun in that sentence.
Transitive verbs require an object to complete their meaning. This sentence has an object (brother) In this sentence the verb baptize is a transitive verb.
This is how you use yesterday in a sentence I went to the carnival yesterday afternoon
In that sentence, yesterday is an adverb, 'visited yesterday'. An example sentence for the noun: Yesterday was the last day of the month. The last day of school was yesterday.