No.
The correct form is the students' books.
The correct way to write the sentence is: "The students' books are on his desk." The apostrophe is placed after the "s" in "students" to show that the books belong to the students.
The correct verb for the plural subject 'books' is 'are': . The student's books are on the desk. (One student, several books,) The students' books are on the desk. (Several students, several books.)
student with books are more knowledge than students without books because students without books is less knowledge.
Brought books that were out of print back to life.
The student's books were on his desk.
I'm not your mom!
In a class of 60 students, if 15 were absent, that leaves 45 students present. Out of those 45, if 7 students brought raincoats, then the number of students who did not bring raincoats is 45 - 7 = 38 students.
I think the books were brought out about 2008 time but I may be wrong. 2005-2008.
600 in the class. 222 brought both pens and pencils so all the rest did not bring both ie 378 (=600-222) did not bring both. Some brought pens, some pens and some neither.
130 - (6x21) 130 - 126 =4 books left
no