"Get (take) our your pencils!" is a literal English equivalent of the French phase Sortez vos crayons! The pronunciation will be "sor-tey vos kra-yo" in French.
lápices de colores
It is Spanish and it means, 'How many pencils do you have?'.
foot, fingers, pencils, table, drum
(French) quelques = some (English)
colouring pencils in french is crayon de coleur
This sentence is fairly easy to translate: "Elle a" means she has. And "des crayons de couleurs" can mean either "crayons" or "colored pencils." The word "des" is often used in French to show "some." Thus: she has some colored pencils. Or: she has some crayons.
Les crayons
It means crayons but crayons in French translated in English is pencils.
in pencils in pencils
les crayons de couleur
the french term of colouring pencils are :les(bian) crayons 8==========D
These are two pencils is a correct sentence. it has a subject (pencils) a describer (two) and some sentence support (these are)
Una lapiz is Spanish. In English, it means a pencil.
Paint is used to color the outside of pencils, and dye for the cores.
some pencils
Some of the brands of mechanical pencils include, but are not limited to, Bic, Pentel, Zebra, uni-ball, Sharpie, and Pilot. It is interesting to note that mechanical pencils can be in the plain, graphite color or there can be colored graphite used in colored mechanical pencils.