"Five laws of library science" is not a sentence, it is a noun phrase. To be a sentence is needs to have a verb; for example:
The five laws of library science are on page nine.
We read the five laws of library.
The correct US punctuation is: Yes, if I am correct, the answer is fifty-five.
Yes. `The chicken laid five eggs.` is a correct sentence.
The sentence "There are five pens in the box" is grammatically correct.
Five is plural (more than one). Therefore, the correct sentence, grammatically speaking, would be "there are five of us".
The library's books are arranged in alphabetical order.
"Wow, we can borrow five books right now! Let's head to the library and start exploring!"
The US punctuation is: Yes, if I am correct, the answer is fifty-five. (or) Yes. If I am correct, the answer is fifty-five.
The Correct Answer Is Seven And Five Is Thriteen If you Are Adding.
When you are referring to more than one type of moss. Example: There are five different mosses growing on my lawn.
The phone number of the Five Rivers Public Library is: 304-478-3880.
forty-five
Seven and five ARE thirteen is the correct way. Except that seven and five is actually 12!