“I come from France” [closed]
No, there is no object in that sentence. "from France" is a prepositional phrase acting as an adverb, in other words it gives more information about the verb 'to come'. This is similar to "He is coming home" or even "he is coming home from France" which still has no object since 'home' and 'France' are locations.
In fact 'to come' is usually an intransitive verb which means that it does not take an object at all.
The Macmillan Online Dictionary has this entry for come which gives several different meanings only one of which is described as transitive. The transitive meaning of come is
1b to move or travel a particular distance to where you are
with the examples
Have you come a long way?
They’ve come about 10 miles from the next village.
I have added italicisation to indicate the direct object phrases in those examples. As you can see they contain a measure of distance which "I come from France" does not. You shoud also be able to see that, in the second one, 'from the next village' is another prepositional phrase acting as an adverb like "from France" which gives more information about the verb 'come'.
All the other meanings are described as intransitive