Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
Yes a pile of books is correct, you can also have a stack of books or a bundle of books
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.
A cornucopia is a symbol meaning abundance or plentiful. An example of a sentence would be: "The family had a cornucopia of food on the table at Thanksgiving".
Without the last E (i.e., tablecloths). Cloths for the table, not clothes for 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.'
Yes a pile of books is correct, you can also have a stack of books or a bundle of books
With the exception of capitalizing the first letter of the sentence and a period at the end, the sentence is correct.
No, the adjective 'that' is singular, the noun it describes, 'tomatoes' is plural. The corrected sentence is:Those tomatoes were smashed on the table.
I has taken a pen who left on the table yesterday.
No, it is not correct. If the treats are on the table, you should write: 'Do not give the dog any food or treats from the table.' If the treats are not on the table, you should write: 'Do not give the dog any food from the table, nor any treats.' As it stands, the sentence means that some of the food is on the table and some of it is on the treat.
Examples * It is here/there/lying on the table, etc. * It is raining/snowing. * It is hard to work out what he really intended. * It is a tricky problem.
Relative to the table, the book remains stationary because there are no outside forces acting on it except gravity which keeps it lying on the table.
something more appropriate would be: the dog who was wanting more food was the one begging at the table.
The phrase "on the table" means someone or something is literally "on" the table. Saying "at the table" means beside, or alongside. So the sentence, There was a chaos on the table, is incorrect. Use "at" instead of "on".Examples of "on":I put my books on the table.The centerpiece on the table was huge.My dog scratched the wood when he jumped up on the table.Examples of "at":She sat at the table.The couple stood at the table while their family toasted them.Standing at the table, we could see name cards sat above each place settings.
Both may be correct in different context. We put our dinner ON the table, but we take our seat AT the table.
"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.