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
Des ciseaux.
ciseaux
No, it's "Your scissors are sharp."
For centuries Amazonian people used Piranhas to cut hair and sharpen blow dart tips. When explores brought scissors to the Amazon region they named scissors after Piranhas.
How do you say 593,493,794 in french.
les ciseaux (and in English, it's spelled SCISSORS)
Des ciseaux.
Scissors are called 'des ciseaux' in French.
If they are indeed scissores, then, yes - you can say these are scissors!
"Des ciseaux" in French translates to "scissors" in English.
Je m'appelle......is how you say my name is.......in French.
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."
Scissors ? I suppose scissors was used during the French Revolution. But if you think about the device used to behead people : it is called the Guillotine.
My name is (whatever) is "Mon nom est ..." or "je m'appelle ..." in French.
Ciseaux
ciseaux
It's not a French name