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Get your workbook and open your binder to the next fresh page.

Get your workbook and open your binder to the next fresh page. Object Complements. A direct object is the receiver of action within a sentence. Follows a  transitive verb  [a type of  action verb ]. Can be  nouns ,  pronouns ,  phrases , or  clauses . Remember this simple formula:

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  1. Get your workbook and open your binder to the next fresh page.

  2. Object Complements

  3. A direct object is the receiver of action within a sentence. • Follows a transitive verb [a type of action verb]. • Can be nouns, pronouns, phrases, or clauses. • Remember this simple formula: • subject + verb + what? or who? = direct object • Examples using the formula: • Maurice played soccer with a grapefruit. • Maurice = subject; played = verb. who? Maurice Maurice played what?Soccer = direct object. .

  4. Direct Objects • Write the following sentence, using the formula to label the parts. • 1. I took my little sister to the movie Mulan.

  5. Bellwork(11/9/11) • English I: Workbook page 48 (1-10) • HW: p. 432 (Exercise 18, 1-10). Write and label the sentences. • English II: Workbook page 45 (11-15) • HW: p. 457 (Exercise 13, 1-10). Write and label the sentences.

  6. Homeroom • Log into http://www.bls.gov/oco/ooh_index.htm • Complete the information inventory handout from last homeroom.

  7. Bellwork(11/9/11) • Take out your homework and prepare to go over it. • English I: p. 432 (Exercise 18, 1-10). Write and label the sentences. • English II: p. 457 (Exercise 13, 1-10). Write and label the sentences.

  8. Indirect Objects • An indirect object is also a noun or pronoun that follows an action verb. • direct object must also be present • will never be a prepositional phrase • more than one may be present • answers “to whom?” or “for whom?” • The librarian gave Natasha the card. • The tennis coach gave Ron and Pete the racquets.

  9. Practice • English I: Workbook page 49 • English II: Workbook page 46

  10. Homework • English I: Textbook page 433 (Exercise 19). • Write the sentences. Label the subject, verb, direct object, and indirect object in each sentence. • English II: Textbook page 458 (Exercise 14). • Write the sentences. Label the subject, verb, direct object, and indirect object in each sentence.

  11. Object Complements • An object complement completes the meaning of a direct object and describes or identifies it. • can be a noun or adjective • must have a direct object first • They named their daughter Natasha. • “Daughter" is the direct object and "Natasha" is the object complement, which renames or describes the direct object. • Objective complements can have modifiers, such as adjectives and/or prepositional phrases. • They elected him the first mayor of the town.

  12. Practice • 1. I consider the driver tired. • 2. The class elected the smallest boy President. • 3. My son painted his room blue. • 4. They considered him a criminal.

  13. Write the sentences and identify the S, V, DO, IO, and OC • 1. Our club voted you treasurer. • 2. Antoine made her happy. • 3. They appointed Mr. Blake chairman of the board. • 4. The judges named her the final contestant. • 5. We named Lakisha our representative.

  14. Write the sentences and identify the S, V, DO, IO, and OC • 1. Aliya gave her all to the broadjump. • 2. The movie made me sad. • 3. She considered herself fairly intelligent. • 4. We took Mr. Juarez the complicated instructions. • 5. They voted Jordin the winner of American Idol.

  15. Object Complements • Linking verbs do not express action. Instead, they connect the subjectof the verb to additional information about the subject.  • The following verbs are true linking verbs: any form of the verb be[am, is, are, was, were, has been, are being, might have been, etc.], become, and seem. 

  16. Then you have a list of verbs with multiple personalities: appear, feel,grow, look, prove, remain, smell, sound, taste, and turn. Sometimes these verbs are linking verbs; sometimes they are action verbs. • How do you tell when they are action verbs and when they are linking verbs? • If you can substitute am, is, or are and the sentence still sounds logical, you have a linking verb on your hands.

  17. Only action verbs can have direct objects. If the verb is linking, then the word that answers the what? or who? question is a subject complement.

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