anglais > français | |
scissors | |
1. n. Ciseaux, paire de ciseaux. | |
These scissors are dull. | |
scissor | |
1. n. Lame de ciseaux. | |
2. v. Couper, retrancher. | |
The erroneous testimony was scissored from the record. | |
anglais > anglais | |
scissors | |
1. n. (usually construed as plural) A tool used for cutting thin material, consisting of two crossing blades attached at a pivot point in such a way that the blades slide across each other when the handles | |
Those scissors are sharp. (indicating singular or plural scissors) | |
That scissors is sharp. (less commonly to indicate singular scissors) | |
Scissors are used to cut the flowers. | |
Use a scissors to cut them if you don't have proper shears. | |
2. n. (rugby) An attacking move conducted by two players; the player without the ball runs from one side of the ball carrier, behind the ball carrier, and receives a pass from the ball carrier on the other | |
They executed a perfect scissors. | |
3. n. (skating) A method of skating with one foot significantly in front of the other. | |
4. n. (gymnastics) An exercise in which the legs are switched back and forth, suggesting the motion of scissors. | |
5. n. (wrestling) A scissors hold. | |
6. n. (rock paper scissors) A hand with the index and middle fingers open (a handshape resembling scissors), that beats paper and is loses to rock. It beats lizard and loses to Spock in rock-paper-scissors- | |
7. n. (rare) plural of scissor | |
français > anglais | |
ciseaux | |
1. n. plural of ciseau | |
2. n. scissors | |