Right. You could also say, "Whose book is this?"
Yes. There's nothing wrong with it grammatically.
"Throw the book at him" IS a sentence.
168 and 169
No.The be verb 'is' is present but 'could' is past.Either The book is so interesting I cannot stop readingor The book was so interesting I could not stop reading.
The subject is "book" or "a book"
The incorrect word in the sentence is "whos." It should be spelled as "whose." The correct sentence would be: "Whose book is this?"
Whose book is this?
you use whose in a sentence when you mash who and is it is who plus is equals whose.but is does not have an e.
What is wrong with him? That book belongs to him.
I could see at a glance that he had given me the wrong book.
The word (on) is the answer you are looking for
I just want to know who's asking about whose laptop this is.
"Who" is used as a subject pronoun to refer to a person, while "whose" is a possessive pronoun used to show ownership or association with a person. For example, "Who is coming to the party?" and "Whose book is this?"
Yes. There's nothing wrong with it grammatically.
The object of a preposition is the word or phrase that the preposition immediately refers to. For example, in the sentence: Mary hid under the table. "under" is a preposition, and "the table" is its object. The object usually comes straight after the preposition, but sometimes it appears before. Compare these two sentences: In whose name shall I book the table? Whose name shall I book the table in? In both sentences, "in" is a preposition, and "whose name" is the object of that preposition.
The subject "book" does not agree with the verb "have." It should be "has" instead of "have" to match in number. The corrected sentence is: "The book I borrowed from the library has many pages falling apart."
The word 'whose' is an interrogative pronoun and relative pronoun.The pronoun 'whose' is the possessive form for 'who' or 'which'.EXAMPLESinterrogative pronoun: Whose book did you borrow? (possessive of 'who')relative pronoun: The book whose cover is missing is mine. (possessive of 'which')