There could be a noun a verb an objective in one sentence, true or false

True. A sentence can contain a noun (a person, place, thing, or idea), a verb (an action or state of being), and an object (a noun that receives the action of the verb) all together. For example: "Sarah (noun) threw (verb) the ball (object)."

True. A sentence can contain a noun (a person, place, thing, or idea), a verb (an action or state of being), and an object (the recipient of the action). For example, "John (noun) eats (verb) an apple (object)."

True. In a sentence, you can have a noun, a verb, and an object. This is known as a basic sentence structure. The noun can act as the subject of the sentence, the verb shows the action or state of being, and the object receives the action of the verb. For example, in the sentence "Alice (noun) eats (verb) an apple (object)," you have all three elements present.