Usually books are kept in a library, or on people's bookshelves at home.
Yes keep is present tensekeep kept keptKeep those books they are good.We kept the books that belonged to our grandfather.We have kept the books for years now and nobody has read them.
Aztec scribes painted books and kept records of taxes.
c.precinct
yes it is believed that Helen kept small books such as diaries
This is passive.The subject receives the action, therefore, therefore it is a passive sentence.
japan
The Talmud is published as a set of large-format books. Whether only a few volumes or an entire set, they're most often kept on a bookshelf, sometimes in a bookcase with drop-front doors to protect the books from dust etc., just as any other valuable and expensive books might be kept.
It depends on why you are keeping two sets of books and what books are they.Novels Non--fiction.If you are referring to accountancy then no it is not immoral if the two are identical and kept as a back up. If however, they are different and kept for fraudulant purposes it is not only immoral it is illegal.
Normally, we use an -ed for the past tense (walk/walked) but the verb "keep" has an irregular past tense. The past form of keep is "kept." I keep my books on the shelf. I kept my books on the shelf.
no she didn't write any books but she always kept a journal with her from everyday she went out to shoot.
He wrote in his (writing) shed at the bottom of his garden. He kept strict hours in which to write, when to rest, and kept to a routine.
If A equals all books in your library and B equals all books then A < B, unless your library is the only library and books are only kept in a library, then A = B.