"Whose" is the word you want.
The incorrect word in the sentence is "whos." It should be spelled as "whose." The correct sentence would be: "Whose book is this?"
She asked him to lay the book on the table, but he lied and said he already did.
Person: John, teacher Place: London, park Thing: car, book Idea: love, freedom
The tense in the sentence "the teacher put the book on the table" is past tense. The verb "put" indicates that the action happened in the past.
We discussed the project during the meeting yesterday.
An indirect object is a noun or pronoun that receives the direct object. For example, in the sentence "I gave the book to her," "her" is the indirect object because she is the recipient of the book (the direct object).
yes, but change some of the words or your teacher could get suspicious.
He didn't Roger Williams did listen in school stop cheating it is wrong I will tell ur teacher so u have been worn ok but my answer is right I have a book to prove it and I asked my teacher and I took a test
My teacher asked me to write a summary for the book I had just finished reading.
"The dictionary is a book that contains word definitions." "The teacher asked Bobby to look up the word dictionary in the dictionary". "A foreign language dictionary shows translations and similar words."
The teacher asked us to read an excerpt from the novel before class.
Not everyone has the same book you do, we need the book title to help you. But even with the book title, this site will not do your homework for you. You see, you have the wrong idea. When your teacher asked you for the answers to those questions in the book, you thought the reason was because your teacher needs the answers. But if your teacher needs the answers, your teacher would come directly to a website like this one, or to a website that specializes in Earth Science, or maybe even to an actual book. Your teacher certainly would not ask people who are just learning this stuff for the first time to bring in the answers. The real mind blower is: Your teacher doesn't need the answers, and doesn't want the answers. Your teacher wants you to find the answers on your own so that you learn a little bit of Earth Science. That won't happen if anybody gives you the answers.
In a text book. I was trying to find that to so i asked my teacher and she said a text book. so i did and i found it there. but you could also go to the libary
summarize
This site will not do your homework for you, or take your tests. You see, you have the wrong idea. When your teacher asked you for the answers to those questions in the book, you thought the reason was because your teacher needs the answers. But if your teacher needs the answers, your teacher would come directly to a website like this one, or to a website that specializes in Earth Science, or maybe even to an actual book. Your teacher certainly would not ask people who are just learning this stuff for the first time to bring in the answers. The real mind blower is: Your teacher doesn't need the answers, and doesn't want the answers. Your teacher wants you to find the answers on your own so that you learn a little bit of Earth Science. That won't happen if anybody gives you the answers.
just kidding :p....i was wrong but i forget sorry...mr freeman is art teacher though
The three little word a are "I guess so." That is Ashley's response when they asked if she'd like to be adopted.
Polonius has just asked Hamlet what he is reading. Of course what he wants Hamlet to say is the name of the book. But just to be irritating Hamlet responds "Words, words, words."