No, you cannot lift a pile of books with your breath. It is biologically impossible because the human lungs can only expel a certain amount of air at a certain velocity, which is only strong enough to blow a few papers across the table. The force needed to lift a pile of books can only be achieved in a wind tunnel, which has wind speeds the speed of category 5 hurricanes. It is impossible to lift a pile of books with your breath because the force needed to blow upward a pile of books would literally have to be beyond the explosion point of the human lung. This is speaking that you are saying 'can you blow a pile of books up with only blowing on it?' and not 'can you lift a pile of books while holding your breath?' It is impossible.
Yes a pile of books is correct, you can also have a stack of books or a bundle of books
He created a scene by reading books and then tossing them in a pile. He found 2 books he wanted to keep to read carefully. He had to leave quickly because the guard wanted to take away his books.
It means, "pile." It could mean a pile of wool, a pile driven into the ground, a Voltaic pile (battery), or an atomic pile (nuclear reactor).
A pile of things can be called: mound - an amount of something in a pile heap - a large pile of something, especially an untidy pile stack - a pile of things placed one on top of the othe mountain - a large pile or amount of something pyramid - a pile of things arranged in the shape of a pyramid bank - a long pile of earth, snow, or sand drift - a large pile of snow or sand formed by the wind wad - a thick pile or ball of papers, money, or thin cloth
In the noun phrase 'a pile of newspapers', the noun 'pile' is functioning as a collective noun for the 'newspapers'.
3000
Yes a pile of books is correct, you can also have a stack of books or a bundle of books
Let x = third pile First Pile = 2x + 10 Second Pile = 2x Third Pile = x (2x+10) + (2x) + (x) = 3000 2x + x + 2x + 10 = 3000 5x + 10 = 3000 5x = 3000 - 10 5x = 2990 x = 2990/5 x = 598 Therefore there are 598 books in the third pile. I'm sure you can figure out how to get how many books are in all other piles.
A "pile" is not a mathematically validated standard measure of volume.remove all till 1 and it will no longer be a pile.a pile of books contains 2 or more books
i think its books try that but i have no idea
Yeah! bundle or pile of books you can say. Same thing . It's correct
A libraryA book group
yes, a hawk-a-dauk can describe a pile of anything for more info: ask "What is a Hawk-a-dauk"
Heap. Like, a 'heap of books'
A reflection.
The adjective in the sentence is "dust." It describes the action of lifting the books, suggesting that the books need to be lifted for the purpose of dusting.
Because you have to use WinRAR to unzip it and install it.