No, the correct sentence should be: "This pen is behind the book."
No
The wording "Could be offered with the book" is an incomplete sentence, incomplete thought. It has no subject. WHAT could be offered? Examples:The coupon could be offered with the book.An autographed letter could be offered with the book.A pen could be offered with the book.
I would have to say no. I believe it would be "Do you have a pen" or "Do you have any pens".
The correct phrase is "I have a pen." It is grammatically correct and follows the subject-verb-object sentence structure (I-subject, have-verb, a pen-object). The phrase "My have a pen" is grammatically incorrect as it does not follow standard English syntax.
I has taken a pen who left on the table yesterday.
The sentence "There are five pens in the box" is grammatically correct.
The noun 'pen' can be the subject, the direct object, or the indirect object of a sentence or phrase. Examples:Subject: The pen is out of ink.Object: I need a new pen.Indirect Object: The sheep are behind the barn in a pen.
No, the question is not grammatically correct. It should be "Does she have a pen?" using the correct form of the verb "have" for the subject "she."
Technically, 'I have no pen' is correct. Instead of using 'I have no pen' or 'I do not have pen', just use 'I do not have a pen' because it is the best way to phrase what you want to say.
He doesn't have a pen
Yes: "The boy kicked the ball and the bat." "Ball" and "bat" are both direct objects. You can use as many direct objects as you want in one sentence.
i have a beautiful pen