Object Complement
Object Complement
Object Complement
The fact is, though, we naturally use object complements all the time when talking and
writing. With the information and examples we lay out in this guide, identifying them will
be a snap.
The housing association named Max president for the coming year.
If we remove the object complements from the above sentences, we can see how they
are essential to the meanings of the sentences they appear in; the resulting sentences
may make sense (sort of), but the meaning is entirely changed:
Dinner parties at Maeve and Killian’s apartment are boisterous and entertaining.
The verb of a sentence with an object complement will always be transitive, since
object complements describe direct objects and transitive verbs are the ones that have
direct objects. But not all transitive verbs go with object complements; the ones that do
often describe actions that cause a change in something, express something’s current
state, or name something, including:
Appoint
Call
Consider
Deem
Elect
Find
Get
Make
Name
Paint
Pronounce
Turn
Here are a few examples of sentences that use these kinds of verbs, direct objects, and
object complements:
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Pia accidentally got the clean floors muddy.
In English, the order of words in a sentence, or syntax, tells us how to understand the
sentence. As elaborate as English sentences can get, there are surprisingly few syntax
patterns they follow, and object complements are an indispensable part of one of those
few: subject + verb + direct object + object complement. How often do you want to
express how someone or something is affecting or thinking about, or talking about
someone or something else? A lot, right? That’s about how often you need object
complements.
That said, there are two other patterns that also involve direct objects interacting with
another element in the predicate, so let’s get into how to tell them apart.
Another common sentence pattern is subject + verb + indirect object + direct object.
Here’s an example:
Muaz is the subject, showed is the verb, and photography is the direct object. The
indirect object—the recipient of the direct object by way of the action of the verb—is the
pronoun us. Now compare that to this sentence using an object complement:
Here, the subject and the direct object haven’t changed, but the verb considers and the
noun phrase his main art form, clue us in that this is about rounding out our
understanding of what Muaz’s photography is rather than describing how he shares it
with others.
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An indirect object typically receives a direct object, while an object complement
describes or names it.
The third kind of direct object sentence to look out for follows this pattern: subject +
verb + direct object + adverb.
These sentences are still about Muaz and his photography, but the presence of an
adverb or adverb phrase in the predicate—beautifully, in a darkroom—tells us that now
we’re talking about how and where Muaz carries out the actions that go into the
creation of his photography, rather than how he defines it. Adverbs modify verbs; object
complements describe or name direct objects.
Here are a few more sentences that show the subject + verb + direct object + object
complement syntax:
Paz’s face turned the color of a tomato when she realized her mistake.
The kids all got their ears pierced on the same day.
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What is an object complement?
An object complement is a word or group of words that describes or renames the direct
object of the verb in a way that is essential to complete the meaning of the sentence.
Most of the time, object complements are nouns, adjectives, or noun or adjective
phrases.
Transitive verbs that describe actions that cause a change in something, express
something’s current state, or name something are often used with object complements.
Some common examples include make, turn, get, call, name,
paint, find, deem, pronounce, consider, appoint, and elect.
predicate adverb?
Although object complements, indirect objects, and predicate adverbs all appear in the
predicate of sentences with a subject, transitive verb, and direct object, they perform
different roles. An indirect object receives the direct object. An object complement
describes or names the direct object. A predicate adverb modifies the verb.