Infinitive, present participle, past participle, adjective, adverb, prepositional phrase are object complements. Can you give some examples?

Infinitive, present participle, past participle, adjective, adverb, prepositional phrase are object complements. Can you give some examples?


infinitive
I have a book to read this evening.
Present participle
There is a boy standing in the office.
past participle
I could see the window broken by the boy
adjective
I always make the room tidy and clean.
Prepositional phrase
I picked up the book on the ground.



What is interrogative plus infinitive
The specific usage is illustrated with examples
When to use interrogative pronouns and interrogative adverbs?


Interrogative + infinitive:
a) Form: what, which, how, when, where and other interrogative pronouns or adverbs, followed by a verb infinitive or a verb infinitive phrase
b) How to save the child is the most important to us
I don't know what to do next
The problem is when to start;
The structure of "interrogative + infinitive" can be rewritten into a clause guided by the interrogative, and the elements of the clause remain unchanged. For example, I don't know what to do. = I don't know what I should do
P.S.
Interrogative pronouns and interrogative adverbs have different meanings. As long as you know which are interrogative pronouns and which are interrogative adverbs, you can distinguish them
1. Interrogative pronouns can be used as subject, object, predicative and attributive in interrogative sentences
Common are: what, who, which, which and so on
What colour is it? It's red
2. The definition of interrogative adverbs. The adverbs used to ask time, place, modality, method, degree, reason, etc. are called interrogative adverbs. There is no distinction between general interrogative adverbs and special interrogative adverbs
Interrogative adverbs include when, where, why and how
When did you see her last
Where does she live
How shall I let you know the result
Why do you leave the door open
Interrogative adverbs are usually used at the beginning of a sentence, and the sentence pattern is the form of a question (as shown in the examples.)
Questions guided by interrogative adverbs can also be used as indirect questions in sentences. At this time, we should pay attention to the position changes of subject, predicate verb and other changes
When did you see her last
Tell me when you saw her last
Where does she live?
Do you know where she lives



When the infinitive of a verb has a verb object relationship with the word it modifies, and has a subject predicate relationship with the subject of a sentence, it uses the active form to express the passive meaning
How to understand the relationship between verb object and subject predicate


There is a premise to your question: infinitives are postpositive attributives
He has a lot of work to do.
The logical object of to do is a lot of work
The action of to do is performed by the subject, that is to say, its logical subject is the subject, and the infinitive is the logical predicate of the subject, that is to say, to do and the subject are the logical subject predicate relationship
In addition, if the infinitive has no subject predicate relationship with the subject of the sentence, use the passive form of the infinitive
Tom, I am going to shopping ,Do you have anythin to be bought?
The subject of the sentence is you, while the executor of the infinitive is I