Direct & Indirect Objects
Direct & Indirect Objects
Direct & Indirect Objects
20 3 G-20-3-3 Pt 1 Act 3 Part B figs 3-4 Use a passive to-infinitive or a reduced form (past participle) after a direct
object following the volitional verbs 'expect,' 'like,' 'need,' and 'want.'
22 3 G-22-3-3 Pt 1 Act 3 Part A figs 3-4 REVIEW: Use a 'that' noun clause ('that' optional) as a direct object.
23 2 G-23-2-3 Pt 1 Act 3 Part A figs 4-5 REVIEW: Use the second person imperative, with and without a subject, to
give commands and instructions/directions.
23 3 G-23-3-3 Pt 2 Act 3 Part C figs 3-4 Use prepositions of place and direction to indicate place and direction.
23 3 G-23-3-4 Pt 1 Act 3 Part C figs 3-4 Form adjectives by adding the derivational suffix '-ern' to nouns to express
'occurring or situated in the direction of.”
23 3 G-23-3-5 Pt 1 Act 3 Part C figs 1-2 Form adjectives and adverbs by adding the derivational suffix '–ward(s)' to
various stems to express 'in a spatial or temporal direction.'
24 1 G-24-1-3 Pt 1 Act 3 Part B figs 5-6 REVIEW: Use a present active affirmative/negative gerund as a direct object
of a verb.
24 3 G-24-3-4 Pt 1 Act 3 Part C figs 1-3 REVIEW: Use an affirmative/negative to-infinitive/to-infinitive phrase as the
direct object of a verb.
24 3 G-24-3-5 Pt 3 Act 3 Part C figs 4-5 After hearing or reading a past perfect (progressive) statement, yes/no
question, or question-word question in direct speech, use 'said/told' plus an
affirmative/negative past perfect (progressive) 'that' noun clause ('that'
optional) to report statements; 'asked' plus a past perfect (progressive) noun
clause introduced by 'if'/'whether' to report yes/no questions; or 'asked' plus a
past perfect (progressive) noun clause introduced by a question-word to
report question-word questions.
30 2 G-30-2-3 Pt 1 Act 1 Part A figs 3-4 Use ‘who,’ ‘what,’ ‘when,’ ‘where,’ ‘which,’ or ‘how’ followed by a to-infinitive
as the direct object after a verb.