Hey :)

I have a quizz on Friday, and on the shetts, it seems to be a mistake...
First it stands there: Complements can be expresseed by adjectives or a bare noun. Objects can't.
And then at an example sentences cannot be replaced my an adjective or a bare noun -> it is a complement.

Can anybody tell me what is correct??
I can't find anything in book...
I'm German, so please try to explain it easy...

The word "complement" means a word (noun or adjective) that completes the meaning of another word or phrase.

My brother is a repairman.
(The complement "repairman" tells more about the subject, "brother." It's also known as a predicate noun.)

My brother is tall.
(The complement "tall" describes the subject. It's also called a predicate adjective.)

Objects, however, can be only nouns or noun phrases or noun clauses.

http://www.chompchomp.com/menu.htm
Go here and choose Terms. Then you can read and study Direct Objects and Subject Complements.

This don't really help me.

Our example was:
People gave the right information to the President.
We prove that to the president is a complement because: it denotes a participant of the giving-event, it cannot be replaced by an adjective or a bare noun, or a pronoun in the nominative and that it does not correspond to the subject of an associated passive clause.

But one session befor we said that 1) complements but not Objects can be expressed by adjectives or a bare noun.
2) That Objects but not complements correspond to the subject of an associated passive clause.

What is true?

"to the President" is not a complement. It's a propositional phrase.

I can't send you the link from my professor... That's to bad, maybe I wirte something wrong or so.. You could have a look there...

<IF> you rephrase the example sentence, it could have an indirect object, but not as it's phrased in your post.

People gave the President the right information.

Do you see the difference?

Yeah, I see.

But on his shetts it really is People gave the right information to the president.
And then he prove that to the President is a complement by the way I tell you above...
I don't understand it

Either the teacher or the text is incorrect, and this is something that often confuses native English speakers, too.

The example you were given has only one complement: "information." It's the direct object.

The rephrased sentence I gave you has both an INDIRECT object and a DIRECT object.

In English, the order and placement of words can change meaning. The same is true in German, right?

Yes, in German the order of words can change the meaning.

I found an other example, maybe you can exlain it to me?

"I had never confessed to her my role in forging the first link in the recent chain of tragic events." TASK: Prove that TO HER is not indirect object but complement.

As long as there is the word "to" there, it's not an indirect object. "to her" is a prepositional phrase. It's not a complement of any kind.

So you say it isn't a complement?

Can you give me a definition of complement?