His books have covers. His books have covers.
adjective subject verb object.
One has, two have.
Pronouns:
He, she, it, mine, yours - has
Mine has a clasp but yours has a button.
I, you, we, they - have
The correct form is "His books have covers." The verb "have" agrees with the plural subject "books."
under the covers
The text feature that is described here: "paper covers that come with some books" is jack covers.
Yes, "bundle of books" is correct. It can refer to a group of books that are sold or grouped together as a set.
Books is correct.
The correct sentence would be "They have many books." This uses the correct subject-verb agreement, where "they" is a plural subject and "have" is the appropriate verb form.
Yes a pile of books is correct, you can also have a stack of books or a bundle of books
cloche
Which of the following represents the correct way to account for depreciation on the books
Each country has different covers, the UK also has adult covers.
a vampire
Yes, books are made from paper, and paper can be recycled, including the soft and hard covers.
yes this is correct.