The subject is therefore the addressee of the complaint, there is a consensus.] Careful! If the subject is the indirect object of a reflexive sentence, there is no agreement. The pronoun y can also replace the object of a number of prepositions that indicate a placement in space or motion: even in questions, the interrogative pronoun is often considered a previous direct object. The pronoun can replace the object of the preposition, including quantitative expressions. Direct objects can be replaced by direct object pronouns (me, te, le, la, we, you, les) that correspond in number and gender to the name they replace. Direct object pronouns are at the head of the verb in all sentences, except for affirmative imperatives. The pronouns of direct objects of the third person (the and the) have the same sex as the noun to which they refer: if there is a direct object that is the recipient of the plot, then the rules of conformity are the same as to have: the past part corresponds to the direct object when placed in front of the verb, and does not accept if it will be placed afterwards. Note that previous entries never correspond to indirect or indirect object pronouns. See past party, approval. Often, one can find several pronouns (usually no more than two) in a single sentence. The rules for placing pronouns are as follows: Stay on the second part of this series, which focuses on the pronouns of indirect objects.

See you soon! When the reflex takes an object, the past participation corresponds to that object and not to the subject when it advances. A direct object is an object to which the verb reacts directly without being transmitted by a preposition: a direct object is a noun that receives the action of a verb, such as the word “cookie” in the sentence “I eat the cookie”. It usually answers the question “What?” or “Who?” What do I eat? The cookie. A direct object pronoun replaces the direct object if the direct object is already implied. . . .