There are in existence two portraits of Shakespeare which were approved by people who actually knew him: the Droushout portrait which appears in the First Folio, and his monument in Stratford Church. Neither of these show him wearing glasses. If he did have reading glasses he is not shown with them. It is certainly possible that he might have owned a pair-they had been invented some centuries before.
a half
i think pair is healtier
i think 1 would be a half?
duo
The standard collective noun for 'glasses' is a pair of glasses, which can be used for a pair of Perspective glasses. Note: The noun Perspective, in this use, is the name of a specific brand of glasses, a proper noun. Proper nouns are always capitalized.
Take them to a place that does repairs, maybe a watch store
A: An optical device, such as a pair of field glasses or Opera glasses, designed for simultaneous use by both eyes and consisting of two small telescopes joined with a single focusing device.
Because they have a pair of lenses.
two pairs of glasses
Binoculars
if one buys a pair of glasses and i break them with in 1 year, does sams store/optical replace the pair of glasses.
Try, You bought yourself a pair of glasses.Or, you could try the grammatically correct form, You bought a pair of glasses for yourself.
get a pair of 3D glasses, and punch out the frames and there you have it!
Yes. I do have a pair of glasses specially made for basketball.
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".
une paire de lunettes (a pair of glasses) - les verres (for drinking out of) (NB un verre can also mean the individual lense in a pair of glasses)