Yes
honey bees (apis mellifera) are kept in hives in an apiary.
It is not usual to sell observation hives with bees. Most beekeepers who use observation hives for demonstrations take frames of bees from their regular hives just for the period of the demonstration. An observation hive is not suitable for keeping bees in for a long period.
Bees stay in bee hives.
Bees don't make hives. A hive is an artificial home provided by a beekeeper to keep his/her bees in.
Obviously bees don't make the hives - humans do that. The hives we see today were designed to make it easier to keep bees and harvest honey. Before the current type of hive, it was necessary for the beekeeper to destroy the nest each autumn in order to take the honey.
No, honey bees typically make hives above ground in structures like trees, caves, or man-made beehives. Ground-dwelling bees like mining bees or sweat bees may create nests underground, but honey bees do not.
they make their hives in trees
In there hives.
In their hives
hives
Bee hives do not freeze in the winter. Bees slow down and cluster to regulate temperatures inside the hive and survive.
they let bees build hives in them