yes
toetoeholdtoenail
No.First of all it is grammar, not grammer.But in answer to the question, apostrophes are wrong here. The apostrophe indicates possession: I assume you are not talking about something that is owned by a pair of pajamas or a pair of bras.
Your question is rather weirdly phrased, however, possibly you would like to know the grammatical classification of the word dismay; it is a noun.
Ewe and you
Yes, saying "a pair of nail clippers" is proper English. In certain cases, items that are made up of two matching parts (like scissors or pliers) are referred to as pairs. This helps distinguish them from singular items.
No. The pair of eyeglasses is singular. The pair of eyeglasses was too big for her small face.
yes it does have ONE pair of parellel sides (check grammar, it should be "does *a trapazoid *have one pair of parellel sides"?
Try, You bought yourself a pair of glasses.Or, you could try the grammatically correct form, You bought a pair of glasses for yourself.
This must pertain to your particular vocabulary word list in your homework assignment. No one else can see the list, and no one should be doing your homework for you.
An ordered pair
No. Both these words are different forms of the same word -- noun and verb.Homophones are like -- made and maid.If you click on 'related links' below, the link will take you to a list of English homophonesYES. If the noun is fall meaning autumn then they are homophones.
Use better grammar then maybe I can help you.