Can you pass me the scissors, please?
Be careful with the scissors because they are sharp.
I have lost the scissors again.
He had scissors on his hands instead of fingers.
I have a big scissors at home.
A sentence starts with a capital letter: 'The...'The noun scissor is incorrect; the singular and plural form is 'scissors', a shortened form of 'a pair of scissors' and the plural 'pairs of scissors'.Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
There are no pronouns for a pair of scissors. Try 'I was trying to cut the card with scissors, but it was too tough for them'. In that sentence 'them' is a pronoun for scissors.
Instead of tearing a paper, you can use scissors in order for you to cut the paper the style you want but more orderly.:) If you are in a hurry, you can use scissors to cut things.:)
No, it is not. The word "scissors" is a noun (and although it ends in an S, it is singular); in the sentence you are asking about, it would need an article. There are two ways to do this: if you are pointing it out by name, you would say, "It is a scissors." (It's not a rock, nor a tree, nor a knife. It's a scissors-- that's what it is called.) But if you are differentiating one pair of scissors it from others, you would say, "It is the scissors I borrowed from my sister."
That is the correct spelling.
A sentence starts with a capital letter: 'The...'The noun scissor is incorrect; the singular and plural form is 'scissors', a shortened form of 'a pair of scissors' and the plural 'pairs of scissors'.Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
A sentence starts with a capital letter: 'The...'The noun scissor is incorrect; the singular and plural form is 'scissors', a shortened form of 'a pair of scissors' and the plural 'pairs of scissors'.Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
There are no pronouns for a pair of scissors. Try 'I was trying to cut the card with scissors, but it was too tough for them'. In that sentence 'them' is a pronoun for scissors.
We cut out the money off coupons with a pair of scissors.
She used the scissors to cut a hole in the paper.
Can you please pass the metal scissors Daniel?
in frnch scissors is: ciseaux in french, the sentence (don't exactly know what you mean by this) the name scissors is: les ciseaux de nom
"Are" is a verb, even at the end of a sentence. For example, if you say, "Do you know where the scissors are?", "are" is still a verb. In this case, it is the verb of an embedded question. "Scissors" is the subject of the verb "are".
Instead of tearing a paper, you can use scissors in order for you to cut the paper the style you want but more orderly.:) If you are in a hurry, you can use scissors to cut things.:)
glue, scissors, paper and felt tipsss
No, it is not. The word "scissors" is a noun (and although it ends in an S, it is singular); in the sentence you are asking about, it would need an article. There are two ways to do this: if you are pointing it out by name, you would say, "It is a scissors." (It's not a rock, nor a tree, nor a knife. It's a scissors-- that's what it is called.) But if you are differentiating one pair of scissors it from others, you would say, "It is the scissors I borrowed from my sister."
Rock, Paper, Scissors.