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
Yes, the noun 'pile' is a collective noun, it can be used as a general collective noun and is often used for a pile of trash, a pile of laundry, a pile of newspapers, etc.
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
Yes, "bundle of books" is correct. It can refer to a group of books that are sold or grouped together as a set.
A group of books is typically called a library or a collection of books.
yes, a hawk-a-dauk can describe a pile of anything for more info: ask "What is a Hawk-a-dauk"
Fundamentally same reason with the why you can't lift yourself when you breath out
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.