You can email it to yourself at your kindle email address (look on Amazon under "Manage My Kindle" for this info). There may be a (very small, less than a dollar) feel.
unfortunately, i have been looking this up all day. from the looks of it, you cant. but you can do it from the email address you put in when you got the kindle, or you can do it from the amazon website.
If both the Nexus device and the Kindle are using the same account, you should be able to read the same book. If you are sharing it (or loaning it) to another recipient, you would enter that recipient's email address, and send that book to them, regardless of what device they are using.
yes
To download an e-book on your Kindle, first connect your Kindle to Wi-Fi. Then, go to the Kindle store using your Kindle device, search for the e-book you want, and click the "Buy" or "Download" button. The e-book will then be downloaded to your Kindle for you to read.
You still have the book but it is like purchased in the app store
The Kindle Fire stores email and photos on its internal, flash memory. This allows it to be easily accessed when needed with little interaction from the user.
email them to the iPad. Open email and hold finger down on attachement until Open with pops up, choose Kindle app.
Kindles do not have a phone number like a mobile device. However, you can send documents to your Kindle via email using its unique Kindle email address, which can be found in your Amazon account settings. If you need assistance, you can contact Amazon customer support for help with your Kindle device.
Yes, you can cite a Kindle book in your research paper by including the author's name, book title, publication date, and the location of the book within the Kindle version (such as a chapter or page number).
To cite a Kindle book in MLA format, include the author's name, book title, publication date, publisher, and the format (Kindle edition). For example: Last name, First name. Book Title. Publisher, Publication Date. Kindle edition.
You look in you phone book and then call them ... and ask for it ...