What is a COI and it’s formation and it’s usage in a sentence
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When we consider the sentence we began with, “Matthew gives the cake to Jacob,” we can conclude that “Jacob” is the indirect object, called the Complément d’Object Indirect (COI) in French, because we can rewrite this sentence as “Matthew gives him the cake.” We know that “the cake” is what is being given, not “him.” Rather, the cake it given to him. Another clue that “Jacob” is the indirect object of the sentence is because of the preposition “to” in “to Jacob.” That preposition is our clue that the relationship to the verb is indirect. The COI pronouns will look very familiar:
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