The city of Munich plans many interesting festivities.

In the above sentence i need to identify
the nouns in the objectice case. I also
need to know what part of the sentence is the word festivities. I know the subject is Munich and the form is simple.

As I said before, in English, all nouns are used as either subjects.

The subject is not Munich; it's city.

Munich is the object of the preposition of.

festivities is the object of the verb.

And yes, it's a simple sentence.

To identify the nouns in the objective case in the given sentence, we need to look for words that are acting as objects or receiving the action of the verb.

In the sentence "The city of Munich plans many interesting festivities," the word "festivities" is a noun in the objective case. It is the direct object of the verb "plans" since it receives the action of the verb.

Additionally, other nouns in the objective case are not present in this sentence. The subject, "Munich," is in the nominative case as it is the subject of the sentence rather than the object.