qu'y a-t-il dans ta trousse ? -
To say "what is in your pencil case" in French, you would say "Qu'y a-t-il dans ta trousse ?"
'ouvrez votre trousse'
"Stylo case"
You would say "J'ai ton crayon" in French to mean "I have your pencil."
Une trosse
A French pencil case typically refers to a container for storing pencils, pens, erasers, and other stationery items. These pencil cases often come in various designs, materials such as leather or fabric, and feature French-inspired motifs like Eiffel Tower, fleur-de-lis, or Parisian scenes. They are popular among students and professionals for organizing and carrying their writing tools.
A pencil case is called 'une trousse'; "In my pencil case I have a pencil" is "dans ma trousse il y a un crayon."
trousse
A pencil case is 'une trousse', then the plural is 'des trousses'.
A French pencil case typically refers to a container for storing pencils, pens, erasers, and other stationery items. These pencil cases often come in various designs, materials such as leather or fabric, and feature French-inspired motifs like Eiffel Tower, fleur-de-lis, or Parisian scenes. They are popular among students and professionals for organizing and carrying their writing tools.
in my pencil case, I don't have ... -> dans ma trousse, il n'y a pas ... it translates back to: in my pencil case, there is no ...
une noir trousse
votre trousse à crayons
'ouvrez votre trousse'
the spelling for pencil case in french is "une trousse".
The word for "pencil" in French is "le crayon".
"Stylo case"
je n'ai pas besoin d'une trousse