In this example, ‘delegates’ (noun) comes after ‘heckled’ (verb). This makes ‘delegates’ the grammatical objects in the sentence but rather than receive the action, the reverse is true.
Oh, look! There’s some thing sleeping in the trees! Common nouns are the names of things, that’s people, places or objects, while a proper noun is the name of a particular person, place or thing.
An argument can be an object (noun) or it can be a phrase. If a predicate is an eventuality (event and states), it takes may take a still undetermined number of arguments. If a predicate is an object, ...
Oh, look! There’s some thing sleeping in the trees! Common nouns are the names of things, that’s people, places or objects, while a proper noun is the name of a particular person, place or thing.
An argument can be an object (noun) or it can be a phrase. If a predicate is an eventuality (event and states), it takes may take a still undetermined number of arguments. If a predicate is an object, ...