Prison
It is correct as far as it goes.The full sentence would be:I have as many books as you do.The obverse would be:You have as many books as I.This is correct, but again, the full sentence would be:You have as many books as I do.
There are (however many) books on the table.
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.
I think that the sentence should read, Laura and I have read many books during our summer vacation. Not your summer vacation. Read your own books.
please finish your question before asking it.
I had to carry many heavy books. Would you carry my books. If you carry my books, I won't have to carry them.
A run-on sentence is a sentence that contains multiple independent clauses not joined correctly. You can identify run-on sentences by looking for missing punctuation (like commas or semicolons) or conjunctions between clauses. Reading the sentence aloud can also help you detect if it sounds too long or disjointed.
With the exception of capitalizing the first letter of the sentence and a period at the end, the sentence is correct.
you.
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There are many types of finish. Your local library should have books on furniture/woodworking, etc..
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