Dans ma trousse j'ai un stylo.
You can say "En mi estuche tengo un bolígrafo" in Spanish.
To say "what is in your pencil case" in French, you would say "Qu'y a-t-il dans ta trousse ?"
Stylo (pen), crayon à papier (pencil), gomme (eraser), règle (ruler), taille-crayon (sharpener).
'ouvrez votre trousse'
Some common items you might find in a French pencil case include pencils (crayons), pens (stylos), erasers (gommes), and pencil sharpeners (taille-crayons). French students also often have items like rulers (règles), markers (marqueurs), and highlighters (surligneurs) in their pencil cases.
"Stylo case"
Nope, erasers too.
Pencil.. Because you can erase it in case you mess up.. Or buy an erasable pen.. They can be found at OfficeDepot or HobbyLobby..
A bit of a dullard aren't you?
It's in his fcucken pencil case...hurr durr
you can sharpen a pencil and not a pen a pen has ink and a pencil does not.
You would visually recognise a pencil from a pen. You would remove either the pencils or pens, depending on what you want your pencil case to contain. Most probably, you would want a mixture of pencils and pens, so the final choice is yours.
pen kudasai
PenPencil
A pencil case is called 'une trousse'; "In my pencil case I have a pencil" is "dans ma trousse il y a un crayon."
Perhaps a pencil or two lots of colours, a sharpener and a rubber, maybe tipex. Also a pen x
to say pencil case in spanish you spell it as un estuche
libro=book boligrafo=pen lapiz=pencil movil=mobile regla=ruler goma=rubber calculadora=calculator