1.Read King of the Wind, and learn more about the adventures of Agba and his horse.

2.Later, the boy and the horse left their home and traveled to England.
3.The head of the stables often mistreated Agba and the young colt.

Identify each direct object

1.King of the wind
2.boy, horse, home
3.Agba, colt

There's one more DO in #1.

2 - rethink

3 - correct

1.adventures

2.home

#2 is now correct, yes.

#1 is tricky.

Read (verb)
King of the Wind (DO)
and (conj)
learn (verb
more (DO)
about the adventures (prepositional phrase)
of Agba and his horse (prepositional phrase)

Do you see it?

Yes I do thank for your help.

To identify the direct objects in the given sentences, we need to determine who or what is directly affected by the action of the verb.

1. Sentence: "Read King of the Wind, and learn more about the adventures of Agba and his horse."
Direct Object: King of the Wind - In this sentence, the direct object is "King of the Wind" because it is the title of the book being read.

2. Sentence: "Later, the boy and the horse left their home and traveled to England."
Direct Object: boy, horse, home - In this sentence, there are multiple direct objects. "Boy" and "horse" are direct objects because they are the subjects of the action verb "left." Additionally, "home" is also a direct object because it is the object being left.

3. Sentence: "The head of the stables often mistreated Agba and the young colt."
Direct Object: Agba, colt - In this sentence, the direct objects are "Agba" and "colt" because they are the subjects of the action verb "mistreated."

Remember, direct objects are the receivers of the action performed by the subject of the sentence.