If they are indeed scissores, then, yes - you can say these are scissors!
The Hawaiian word for scissors is "ʻoki" or "ʻokiʻoki".
les ciseaux (and in English, it's spelled SCISSORS)
"Ножницы" (pronounced as nozh-neet-sy) is the word for scissors in Russian.
The correct spelling is scissors. Hard to say sometimes; harder to pronounce sometimes. Note the c seems silent.
Scissor is a verb meaning to cut with scissors; to move in a way resembling the action of scissors. It has no plural formThe noun is scissors. Scissors is both the plural and singular form. The noun scissors belongs to a group of nouns that are words for things that require two parts to make the whole. The noun scissors is a shortened for for a 'pair of scissors'. The plural form is 'pairs of scissors.
The correct phrase is "scissors were" because "scissors" is a plural noun. Therefore, you would say, "The scissors were on the table." Using "scissors was" is grammatically incorrect.
No, it's "Your scissors are sharp."
It is correct, but remember it also depends upon the context in which it is used. It is also correct to say a pair of scissors.Since scissors is plural, you can not say "scrissors" it is either a pair of scissors or just scissors.
Scissors is actually singular and plural. It is all in how you say it. As an example: I have a pair of scissors. I have 5 pair of scissors.
To say scissors in Spanish is tijeras. (tee-HAIR-ahs)Scissors = Tijeras
Wrong. You must say, "the scissors are on the table"
Tesouras
rock
Well, honey, "scissors" is technically a plural noun. You don't say "a scissors," you say "a pair of scissors." So, if you're talking about just one of those cutting contraptions, you're gonna have to say "scissor" and sound a bit strange. But hey, language is weird like that.
The Hawaiian word for scissors is "ʻoki" or "ʻokiʻoki".
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."
When they say to see your papers, you say SCISSORS BEATS PAPER and drive off