A textbook is mostly paper, which is primarily composed of cellulose. However,, there are other substances mixed in as well.
The physical properties of a textbook are **************************
A book is not a pure chemical compound but its main constituent is paper (if you mean an old-fashioned book and not an E-book), which is (mainly) a linear beta-carbohydrate polymere of glucose, easy burnable, rather insoluble etc.
The movement of a textbook is a physical change, not a chemical change. Physical changes involve alterations in the appearance or state of a substance without changing its chemical composition. Moving a textbook from one place to another does not alter the chemical makeup of the textbook.
physical
I really don't know anything that would, strictly speaking, cover all three of those. You should carefully read your textbook, looking for some indication of what answer it's looking for. I'd guess "intrinsic properties", though I have some reservations about regarding texture as intrinsic. Another possibility would be "physical properties," with taste being the outlier there.
a compound has physical properties that
Both are physical properties.
It stated that: The physical and chemical properties of elements are periodic functions of their atomic numbers.
Noticable things are physical properties. Look, appearance, feel, taste, etc. are physical properties. Physical properties can change after a chemical reaction.
volume
What is the physical properties of a resistance thermometer
Star is a noun and not the physical properties.