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Select all of the grammatical structures which require objective pronouns. subject of a sentence direct object indirect object object of a preposition object of a verbal appositives of nouns used as subjects appositives of nouns used as objects predicate noun
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Welcome to QuestionCove. Do you have any ideas/guesses? Also, do you know which ones to take off?
No not really. I`m super confused about it.
I`m in credit recovery for English. It was because of my days that I was out last semester.
Never mind. I got it figured out now.
Okay.
Subject of a sentence:A subject tells us who or what the sentence is going to be about. Without a subject, we cannot have a complete sentence. A simple subject is a subject that has just one noun as the focus of the sentence. This means that only one noun does the action, or connects, to the verb of the sentence Direct object:A direct object receives the action performed by the subject. The verb used with a direct object is always an action verb. Indirect object: The indirect object is the noun or pronoun that receives the direct object. Typically, an indirect object precedes the direct object and can be found by asking who or what received the direct object. Object of a preposition: Prepositions may be defined as any word or group of words that relates a noun or a pronoun to another word in the sentence.The object of a preposition is always a noun or a pronoun, or perhaps one or two of each. Object of a verbal: Action verbs come in two varieties: transitive verbs and intransitive verbs. A transitive verb has the intrinsic ability to attach directly to a noun, and that noun is called the direct object. Thus, in the sentence John hit the ball, the word ball is the direct object of the transitive verb hit. Also, objects of verbs show up in verbal phrases as well. These are called verbal objects. If the verb is transitive, it can pick up a noun and produce a phrase. Appositives of nouns used as subjects:An appositive can come before or after the main noun and it can be at the beginning, middle, or end of a sentence, as long as it sits beside the noun it defines. As a noun phrase, an appositive does not have a subject or predicate, and is not a complete thought. Appositives of nouns used as objects: An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. The appositive can be a short or long combination of words. Predicate noun:A predicate noun is a single noun or a noun phrase that renames the subject of a sentence and follows a form of the verb "to be" or another linking verb.
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