Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The posture is then held rather than moved toward the indirect object.
The sentence makes perfect sense without the indirect object.
The indirect object represents the person or thing to which the action of the verb is directed.
Here some grammarians also see son as the indirect object (letter is the term which cannot be left out).
In the traditional terminology, these pronouns can be either direct or indirect objects.
One can use the objective form for the direct object and the indirect object.
Indirect objects are numbered with an object number and a generation number.
The dative case marks the indirect object of an action and can be translated as "to."
The indirect object is in a way the recipient of the direct object.
Verbs whose direct or indirect objects refer to the same entities as their subjects.
The genitive and the indirect object cases are expressed by prepositions.
Indirect object: Hunter is the boy to whom Jessica gave a gift.
Function - the indirect object is often the topic, mostly misunderstood as similar to English passive voice.
The Dative case governs the indirect object of a sentence and location.
Direct and indirect object pronouns also agree in person, number, gender, and case.
Note that the concept of an indirect object may be rendered by a prepositional phrase.
The Hebrew grammar distinguishes between various kinds of indirect objects, according to what they specify.
Some verbs can take two objects: an indirect object and a direct object.
Or, one can use the preposition a before the pronoun for the indirect object:
(subject we corresponds to the indirect object of give)
As with many other languages, the dative case is used in Hungarian to show the indirect object of a verb.
These words may contain subjects, objects, indirect objects, and possibly indicate possession.
Indirect objects (the benefactor or possessive) are indicated with the m- set marker.
Note, however, that some ambiguities arise, as the verb encapsulates the indirect object.
Transitive verbs can have both a direct and an indirect object, but they must have at least one of the two.