In all of the above examples, the indirect object comes before the direct object, but when you ask the questions "what is thrown" (the ball), "what is given" (the phone) "what is asked" (a question) and "what is read" (a book) the answers will tell you which noun is the direct object. Other times it is less obvious which noun is the direct object and which is the indirect object, as in the examples below: Sometimes the direct and indirect objects are more obvious, as in the examples below: Directions: Identify only the subject, the direct object, and the indirect object or the object of the preposition in each sentence. In "She forgave Sam for ruining the party" the direct object is "Sam" and the indirect object is "ruining the party." Below is an example of the direct object of "forgive" being a person: In the above example, the direct object of "forgive" is something that is wrong. This sentence has an added confusion because the direct object of "forgive" can sometimes be a person (me) and sometimes be something that is wrong (my mistake). The mistake is being forgiven for me so "me" is the indirect object. In the sentence "You forgave me my mistake" the thing being forgiven is the mistake, so "my mistake" is the direct object. It answers the question "what" or "whom." An indirect object answers the question "for what," "of what," "to what," "for whom," "of whom," or "to whom" and accompanies a direct object. A direct object is the person or thing that directly receives the action or effect of the verb.