it is pair
When you say "glasses", it is plural. A "glass" is one of the lenses. "Glasses" would refer to both of the lenses, and a "pair of glasses" doesn't mention anything about the frame, but it mentions the two lenses. The frame is the object that joins the two lenses so you don't have to wear contacts and so it can stay on your head. When you say "a pair of glasses", you are referring to the "pair of lenses", not the frame. The frame holding the two lenses makes us think that it is one object, when the word "glasses" refers only to the lenses, not the frame. That is why it is called "a pair of glasses".
The stain that sticks to the peptidoglycan in the cell wall of bacteria is called crystal violet.
Thymine can pair with adenine in DNA, while uracil can pair with adenine in RNA.
A pair of inequalities joined by "and" is called a conjunction, while a pair of inequalities joined by "or" is called a disjunction.
Homologous chromosomes carry genes for the same traits at corresponding loci. They are similar in size and shape and are inherited from each parent.
sticks
stones
The word that most commonly pairs with "sticks" is "stones," to form the phrase "sticks and stones."
You go to the lighthouse and at the bottom right hand corner the is a blue piece of paper click on that and on the right you will find a pair of drum sticks. They are out after the Music Jam on 2010
The best tool for cutting popsicle sticks is a sharp utility knife or a pair of scissors.
No, the word pair is not an adverb.The word pair is a noun (he has a pair of cards) and a verb.(I will pair them up).
You use sticks, but a special pair of snare sticks. You do NOT want to use trap set sticks on a marching snare drum. If it's a trap set snare drum then you can use thinner trap set sticks.
one of a pair of cylindrical hardwood sticks that are used as a percussion instrument
The easiest way to cut popsicle sticks is to use a sharp pair of scissors or a small saw.
The best tool to use for cutting popsicle sticks is a sharp utility knife or a pair of scissors.
No, pride and prejudice is a word pair.
The pair word is 'thin': thick and thin.