Direct object and pleonastic indirect object

Direct object and indirect object are those complements that are grouped with verbs, complementing their meaning. Simple, isn't it? But, if by chance you have already forgotten about them, just one click is enough, because as soon as you will come across the text “Direct object and indirect object” 

Well, concepts remembered, let's seek to make our knowledge a little more perfected, knowing from now on the so-calleddirect object and pleonastic indirect object. But why pleonastic?

This term, pleonastic, which acts as a quality of direct object and indirect object, comes from a figure of speech calledpleonasm. It may even be that you don't know what it really is figure of speech, and, for this reason, we would like you to understand that these are resources used by those who write, whose intention is to give more expressiveness, to enrich the discourse they give. In this sense, pleonasm consists of intensifying the meaning of an element, of an expression of the text through the repetition of the idea expressed in it.

We believe that after this explanation you will have a little easier to understand about the inherent characteristics of the subject we are talking about. So, how about we go to analyze some examples, huh?

The direct object and the indirect object have particularities

that beautiful girl, saw her the moment the bell rang for recess.

We have the direct object at the beginning of the prayer - that beautiful girl – and then we have his presence again, only now represented by a personal pronoun of the oblique case, occupying the position where he (the object) should really be.

So, analyzing the prayer, we have:

that beautiful girl – direct object.

A (personal pronoun of the oblique case) - pleonastic direct object.

Let's check a case related to the indirect object?

To my parents, I give them love and affection.

In the same way as it happened before, we have that the indirect object appears at the beginning of the prayer – to my parents – and then then it reappears, represented, therefore, by a personal pronoun of the oblique case "them", which always acts as an object indirect.

In this way, we obtain as a result:

To my parents - indirect object
them (personal pronoun of the oblique case) - them

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