A brush is 'une brosse' (fem.) in French.
craie brosses
It depends on which type of brush you mean. If you men a brush as in a shrubbery, then the word brush is plural and singular. To be lost in the brush implies that you are in an area that is full of bushes or shrubberies. If you mean a brush that you use in your hair, then the plural is brushes.
It can be a common noun and also a verb. In the following sentence, first it is a common noun and then it is a verb. You brush your hair with a brush.
Un chiffon (a rag) or une brosse (a brush) or une éponge (a sponge) can be used to erase chalk on the blackboard.
The noun 'brush' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing. The word 'brush' is also a verb: brush, brushes, brushing, brushed.
The French word for "brush" is "brosse."
a tooth brush is 'une brosse à dents' in French.
"I brush my teeth!" in English is Je me brosse les dents!in French.
If you directly translate it, its brush but it means brush like hair, so .. really short brush - like hair.
brosser means 'to brush' in French.
une brosse a dents
I brush my hair(english)=Je brosse mes cheveux(Français)
craie brosses
De se brosser les dentsThat means 'to brush one's teeth'
Brosse is French for "brush." The 'de la' part means, 'of/from the'. Together it means, "of/from the brush."
La brosse (fem.) is 'the brush' in English.
Why are you asking us? Get off your lazy butt and ask someone that sell french plates!