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GARangerFan (talk | contribs) (Created page with "An '''objective complement''' is a noun, pronoun or adjective that follows a '''direct object''' and further describes what the object is. The sentence must contain a direct o...") |
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An | An objective complement is an adjective, noun, or group of words that acts as an adjective or noun which modifies the [[object]] of a sentence. | ||
== The Rules == | |||
'''Identifying Objects''' | |||
*A direct object is a noun or pronoun that follows a [[transitive verb]] and completes its meaning. | |||
*An indirect object receives the direct object. | |||
'''Modifying an Object''' | |||
*Whereas a [[subject complement]] modifies the subject of a sentence, an object complement only modifies an object. | |||
**Verbs which have to do with perceiving, judging or changing something typically cause their direct objects to take on object complements | |||
== Usage == | |||
'''Object Complement''' | |||
=== Example 1 === | |||
The student body voted Lucy <u>prom queen</u>. | |||
< | |||
*"Lucy" is the direct object of the sentence, "voted" is the transitive verb, and "prom queen" is the object complement as it modifies the direct object "Lucy". | |||
=== Example 2 === | |||
The drug will keep your body <u>healthy</u>. | |||
*"Your body" is the direct object of the transitive verb "keep", and "healthy" is the object compliment as it refers to the direct object "your body". | |||
'''Subject Compliment''' | |||
[[Subject complements]] are similar to an object compliments as they perform essentially the same function: modifying a noun or pronoun within a [[sentence]]. However, subject compliments modify or refer to a sentence's subject only. | |||
=== Example === | |||
Lucy became the <u>prom queen</u>. | |||
*In this case, "became" functions as a [[linking verb]] and not a transitive one; because there is no object one cannot be modified. The complement "prom queen" refers to the subject "Lucy", and is therefore a subject compliment. | |||
== External Links == | |||
[http://www.cws.illinois.edu/workshop/writers/complements/ Grammar Handbook: Complements] | |||
[http://www.uottawa.ca/academic/arts/writcent/hypergrammar/objcompl.html Objects and Compliments] |