A ditransitive prepositional verb is a verb that takes both a direct object and a prepositional object. The verb is followed by a direct object, then a preposition, and finally, a prepositional object.
For example:
• Tom invited Jill to Harry‘s party.
Here Jill is the direct object and Harry's party is the prepositional object. As in this case, the prepositional objects of ditransitive prepositional verbs are often non-finite clauses, but this is not always so. For example: in the sentence,
• Jill doesn't earn much money from her teaching job.
the noun phrase, her teaching job is a prepositional object.