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Direct Vs Indirect Object 1

The document provides information about direct and indirect objects in English grammar. It defines subjects, transitive and intransitive verbs, and direct and indirect objects. It explains that direct objects receive the action of a transitive verb while indirect objects receive the result of that action. The position of direct and indirect objects in a sentence is also covered, along with examples using subject and object pronouns like I, him, us. The document concludes by providing a link to a quiz to test the reader's understanding.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
295 views19 pages

Direct Vs Indirect Object 1

The document provides information about direct and indirect objects in English grammar. It defines subjects, transitive and intransitive verbs, and direct and indirect objects. It explains that direct objects receive the action of a transitive verb while indirect objects receive the result of that action. The position of direct and indirect objects in a sentence is also covered, along with examples using subject and object pronouns like I, him, us. The document concludes by providing a link to a quiz to test the reader's understanding.

Uploaded by

Izaque Jaime
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Direct vs.

Indirect
Objects
Important notice:

At the end of this presentation there is a link to a


Google Form quiz. You must score an 80% or
higher to pass the quiz.

Please take your time viewing and studying this


material before you proceed with the quiz.
Objectives
• Learn what direct and indirect objects are
• Differentiate between direct objects and indirect objects
• Use direct and indirect objects correctly
Sentence structure

Transitive Direct Indirect


verb Object Object
Subject (Optional)

Intransitive When, where, how,


Verb for how long, with
whom
A subject
• Is a noun, noun phrase or pronoun that refers to a person,
place, animal or thing.
• It is usually the agent of the sentence.
• The agent is the one doing the verb, the one that performs
the action.
• For example: My mother ran to the store to get some last-
minute groceries.
A transitive verb
• Is a verb that requires an object.
• There are verbs like “to walk”, “to sleep”, “to dance” that
deliver a complete meaning on their own; these are called
intransitive verbs.
✓“I danced.”
• Transitive verbs, however, need more information to
complete their meaning.
✓ For example: “I found…?”
✓The verb “to find” is a transitive verb because, when using that verb,
it requires you to say what was found; otherwise, the idea is
incomplete.
What is an object?
• An object is a noun, a noun phrase or a pronoun that
refers to a person, place or thing.
• It is the recipient of the action of a transitive verb.
• Transitive verbs allow for two types of objects: direct
objects and indirect objects.
A direct object (DO)
• Is a noun or noun phrase that identifies who or what
receives the action of a transitive verb.
• Answers the question “Whom? (formal)/Who? (informal)”
✓ I saw Martha (DO).
✓ Whom did you see? Martha (DO)
✓ Martha is the direct object of the verb ”to see”.

• Can also be the product of the action in a question that


starts with “What?”.
✓ He wrote a letter (DO).
✓ What did he write? A letter (DO)
✓ A letter is the direct object of the verb “to write”.
Indirect Object (IO)
• Is a noun or a noun phrase that refers to the person or thing
that receives the result of a transitive verb.
• If the direct object is the product of the action, the indirect
object is the recipient of that product.
• Answers the questions “To whom? For whom?” and “To
what? For what?”
✓ He wrote Martha (IO) a letter.
✓ To whom did he write a letter? (Formal)
✓ Who did he write a letter to? (Informal)
✓ Martha is the indirect object of the verb “to write”.
Position
• Both objects come after the verb.
• The indirect object always needs a direct object with it. The
indirect object usually comes before the direct object.
✓ She gave her mom a birthday card.
• The indirect object can also be used with a preposition (“to”
or “for”), in which case the indirect object must come after
the direct object.
✓ (Incorrect) I wrote to my sister a letter.
✓ (Correct) I wrote a letter to my sister.
✓ (Correct) I wrote my sister a letter.
Position
• Do not place a word in between a verb and its direct
object, unless it is an indirect object.
✓ (Incorrect) I wrote yesterday a letter to my sister.
✓ (Correct) I wrote a letter to my sister yesterday.
✓ (Correct) Yesterday, I wrote my sister a letter.
Subject Pronouns
• Personal pronouns refer back to people and things that
have already been identified.
• They have different subject and object forms, except for
you (sing. or plural) and it: you and it stay the same.
• They can act as the subject of a clause. We use them
before a verb to show who is performing the action.
Grammatical Person Singular Plural
1st person I We
2nd person You You
3rd person He, she, it They
Object Pronouns (OP)
• Are used to replace the direct object and/or the indirect
object in a sentence.
• Personal object pronouns are used after the verb or after a
preposition.
Grammatical Person Singular Plural
1st person Me Us
2nd person You You

✓ 3rd person Him, her, it Them


✓ Max gave me (object pronoun) roses for my birthday.
✓ They sent us (object pronoun) an invitation for the wedding.
✓ The contract? I sent it (object pronoun) to you (object pronoun) via
email.
Subject Pronouns (SP) and Object
Pronouns (OP)
• I, me
➢ I and me refer to the speaker or writer. I is the subject form
and me is the object form.
➢I (SP) like you. Do you like me (OP)?
• You
➢ You refers to the listener or reader. It is both the subject and
the object form. You can refer to one person or more than one
person.
➢The context let us know if it’s singular or plural.
➢You (SP) overslept. I told you (OP) to go to sleep early.
Subject Pronouns (SP) and Object
Pronouns (OP)
• He, him
➢ Singular third person masculine pronouns. He is the subject
form and him is the object form.
➢He (SP) bought roses for his wife. She bought cologne for him
(OP).
• She, her
➢ Singular third person feminine pronouns. She is the subject
form and her is the object form.
➢ She (SP) wanted chocolates. He bought her (OP) chocolates.
Subject Pronouns (SP) and Object
Pronouns (OP)
• It
➢ Refers to lifeless things, animals, situations, ideas or abstract
entities.
➢ As a subject, it can be used as an empty pronoun to place in the
subject position when there is no other subject, particularly when
talking about weather or time.
➢ It is also an object
➢ It (SP) is right by the corner. You will see it (OP) as soon as you
go in.
Subject Pronouns (SP) and Object
Pronouns (OP)
• We, us
➢ We and us refer to different groups of people, but always including
the speaker. We is the subject form and us is the object form.
➢ We (SP) just got here. Did they call us (OP)?

• They, them
➢ They and them refer to specific groups of people, things and
animals.
➢ They is the subject form and them is the object form.
➢ They (SP) are too expensive. I’m not buying them (OP).
Works Cited
Allen, Shundalyn. Who vs. Whom. 5 June 2020, www.grammarly.com/blog/who-vs-whom-
its-not-as-complicated-as-you-might-think/.
Cambridge University Press. “Objects - English Grammar Today.” Cambridge Dictionary,
2020, dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/objects?q=Objects.
Cambridge University Press. "Pronouns: Personal ( I, Me, You, Him, It, They, Etc.) -
English Grammar Today - Cambridge Dictionary." 2020. Web. 16 Oct. 2020.
Cambridge University Press. "Verb Patterns: With and without Objects." English Grammar
Today - Cambridge Dictionary. 2020. Web. 16 Oct. 2020.
Espresso English. Common English Mistakes with Direct and Indirect Objects. Youtube,
2017,
www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=182&v=U0daTW1kVus&feature=emb_title.
Accessed 1 Sept. 2020.
Nordquist, Richard. “Definition of Objects in English Grammar, With
Examples.” ThoughtCo, 2019, www.thoughtco.com/object-in-grammar-1691445.
Nordquist, Richard. “How Direct Objects Are Used in English Grammar.” ThoughtCo,
2020, www.thoughtco.com/what-is-a-direct-object-1690459.
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