Read through the book.
Maybe even better: Read the book.
you go to your bookcase and press A. it will then say read book and quit. select read book and then scroll through books you have to read one. when you find a book you want to read, scroll to that book and then press A. Fin(you never knew?!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I would say read it front to back so you understand all about Glaucoma. I'm not familiar with the book but when I get a new book I read through it twice.
I would say it is the very best book to read and if you are a Christian it is God's book to you.
read it , i should say
I would say you need to have read it...
Yes. It is one of those sentences with an implied subject, which is why it can be confusing. But if you are telling someone to do something, and say "read this" or "read that." ... it is still a sentence, even though you don't say "you, read that," or "Sally, read that." If you are talking about yourself though, you need to add the "I." So... "I read a joke in a book" is correct. It is only correct without a subject if you are instructing someone else about what to do.
Read the book at home. She can't yell at you there. If you have to record what you read, make sure you read another book, too. Then, you can honestly say you were reading the other book, and she can't yell at you for reading the book you want to read. (Just make sure you don't tell her about the book you're not supposed to be reading. What she doesn't know can't hurt her.)
Well when i read the book i felt like it helped me a lot it was suck a good book... lmao jk i did not read it but the things people say about the book is that it was a good book and the want to read it a second time
you read it from left to right
You write it the same. The past tense of read [rhyme with reed] is read [rhyme with red]. English is strange in many ways.
Yes! very good book i would have to say! :)
all i can say is read the book! hahaha