Yes a pile of books is correct, you can also have a stack of books or a bundle of books
A sentence starts with a capital letter: 'The...'The noun scissor is incorrect; the singular and plural form is 'scissors', a shortened form of 'a pair of scissors' and the plural 'pairs of scissors'.Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
With the exception of capitalizing the first letter of the sentence and a period at the end, the sentence is correct.
"Herein lies" is correct. "Lays" implies that it is the object that is lying. "Lies" implies that the subject is lying. ("Lying" being the gerund for "lie".)When you say "herein lies the mcguffin." You are saying that the mcguffin is lying, you are not saying that the mcguffin is laying something else. You lie (yourself) on the ground. You lay a book on the table. You lay your argument before me and thus, there it lies.Ans2:The hen is in her coop and herein lays eggs.The lawyer has entered the courtroom and herein lies.Herein lies an argument that both usages can be correct.
Without the last E (i.e., tablecloths). Cloths for the table, not clothes for the table.
disassembled
A sentence starts with a capital letter: 'The...'The noun scissor is incorrect; the singular and plural form is 'scissors', a shortened form of 'a pair of scissors' and the plural 'pairs of scissors'.Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
A sentence starts with a capital letter: 'The...'The noun scissor is incorrect; the singular and plural form is 'scissors', a shortened form of 'a pair of scissors' and the plural 'pairs of scissors'.Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
With the exception of capitalizing the first letter of the sentence and a period at the end, the sentence is correct.
There are (however many) books on the table.
"He sits by the table" is correct. "He is seated by the table" is also correct. The context in which you are using them may influence which you use and also what particular idea you want to get across.
"Herein lies" is correct. "Lays" implies that it is the object that is lying. "Lies" implies that the subject is lying. ("Lying" being the gerund for "lie".)When you say "herein lies the mcguffin." You are saying that the mcguffin is lying, you are not saying that the mcguffin is laying something else. You lie (yourself) on the ground. You lay a book on the table. You lay your argument before me and thus, there it lies.Ans2:The hen is in her coop and herein lays eggs.The lawyer has entered the courtroom and herein lies.Herein lies an argument that both usages can be correct.
Sous la table is 'under the table' in English.
"Table" in English is tavola in Italian.
Roofopen book lying on table
what is the correct truth table for p V~ q
The correct usage is "at the table." This phrase indicates being physically present and seated around a table, ready to eat or engage in discussions. "On the table" typically refers to something being physically placed on top of a table.
While I was reading the newpaper, (you have to define who exactly is doing the particular action) the cat jumped on the table. This is for an English class right?