Indirect Object: Difference between revisions
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The Indirect Object | |||
Test for identifying indirect objects in English | |||
An indirect object requires the presence of a direct object. | |||
An indirect object is the NP that precedes the direct object. | |||
I passed Kimindir.obj [the ball]dir.obj | |||
Usually, an indirect object can appear as an oblique to-PP complement. | |||
Note: for many grammarians, such to-PPs are also often called indirect objects. | |||
I passed Kim the salt. -> I passed the salt to Kim. | |||
I passed Kim the salt. -> *I passed Kim to the salt. | |||
Passivization: An indirect object can be passivized, with the direct object remaining an accusative NP. If the direct object is passivized, the indirect object must appear as an oblique complement. | |||
I passed Kim the salt. -> Kim was passed the salt. | |||
I passed Kim the salt. -> The salt was passed *(to) Kim. | |||
Categories and structural position | |||
The indirect object is an NP in accusative case | |||
It is a sister of V and NP and dominated by a VP. | |||
Example: | |||
_S_ | |||
/ \ | |||
/ AuxP | |||
/ / \ | |||
subj / ___VP___ | |||
/ / / \ \ | |||
/ / / ind.obj dir.obj | |||
/ / / | \ | |||
NP Aux V NP __NP__ | |||
/__\ | | /__\ /______\ | |||
Pat will pass Kim the salt. | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
<div align="center"> | |||
[[Predicate| ← '''Predicate''']] [[Phrases| ↑ '''Phrases''']] [[Predicate_Complement| → '''Predicate Complement Object''']] | |||
</div> |
Revision as of 09:30, 4 May 2017
The Indirect Object Test for identifying indirect objects in English An indirect object requires the presence of a direct object. An indirect object is the NP that precedes the direct object. I passed Kimindir.obj [the ball]dir.obj Usually, an indirect object can appear as an oblique to-PP complement. Note: for many grammarians, such to-PPs are also often called indirect objects. I passed Kim the salt. -> I passed the salt to Kim. I passed Kim the salt. -> *I passed Kim to the salt. Passivization: An indirect object can be passivized, with the direct object remaining an accusative NP. If the direct object is passivized, the indirect object must appear as an oblique complement. I passed Kim the salt. -> Kim was passed the salt. I passed Kim the salt. -> The salt was passed *(to) Kim. Categories and structural position The indirect object is an NP in accusative case It is a sister of V and NP and dominated by a VP. Example:
_S_ / \ / AuxP / / \ subj / ___VP___ / / / \ \ / / / ind.obj dir.obj / / / | \ NP Aux V NP __NP__ /__\ | | /__\ /______\ Pat will pass Kim the salt.