objects
It is
very easy to decide whether the word following the verb is an object or not. We
have to ask any one of the three questions, ‘what’/ ‘which’/ ‘whom’.
E.g.
He ate
an apple. ( What did he eat?-an apple)
I prefer
tea. ( Which do you prefer?-tea)
She met
her friend (Whom did she meet?-her friend)
Some
verbs take two objects.
E.g.
1. I
gave her a card.
2. He
offered him a seat.
In
sentence 1, we have answers for ‘What did I give?- ( a card) and whom did I
give? ( her)
In the
same way, in sentence 2, we have two objects, ‘a seat’ and ‘him’.
That
which answers the question ‘what’ is known as the direct object, and that which
answers the question ‘whom’ is known as the indirect object. If there is only
one object, it is just called ‘object’.
Though
Indians use expressions such as ‘I gave a card to him’ because of the influence
of our mother tongue, according to the sentence pattern in English, the
indirect object precedes the direct object as in sentences 1 & 2.
In
Tamil, the name for the object is ‘செயப்படுபொருள்‘ and in Hindi, it is
‘कर्म’. is ‘कर्म’.
Notice the appropriateness of the names in Tamil and
Hindi.
* Why is a
transitive verb called so?
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