scissors

✂️
Betekenis (Engels)

Concepten

Synoniemen

scissor hold

scissors hold

scissor grip

scissors grip

grata

greta

red cross

churus

pair of pincers

stink weed

red dirt

barber’s clippers

scissors kick

Rose Marie

cutting instrument

pair of shears

grefa

grifa

Kentucky blue

blue sage

crazy weed

herba

scissor jump

cochornis

Chicago green

Colorado cocktail

love weed

viper's weed

chira

llesca

marley

dona Juana

gauge butt

aunt Mary

African bush

giggle smoke

Columbus black

drag weed

white-haired lady

esra

yellow submarine

jive stick

Pakistani black

lubage

mor a grifa

mooca

bullyon

don Jem

giggle weed

snop

duby

cosa

messorole

dawamesk

frajo

jay smoke

grass brownies

mooster

righteous bush

flower tops

gunja

Wacky terbacky

laughing grass

potten bush

killer weed

pretendo

durog

coliflor tostao

yesco

kgb

pretendica

sezz

fraho

sasfras

kumba

griffa

Mary weaver

dubbe

laughing weed

bo-bo

hanhich

zambi

sweet Lucy

rasta weed

mohasky

m.u.

Mary Jonas

queen Ann's lace

modams

canamo

draf weed

splim

Panama gold

cheeo

dry high

Acapulco red

baby bhang

gunney

Panama cut

p.r.

smoke Canada

diambista

butter flower

yesca

dinkie dow

manhattan silver

joy smoke

lakbay diva

vipe

canappa

Mary and Johnny

cavite all star

Indian boy

mootie

crying weed

cannabis tea

takkouri

rainy day woman

o.j.

Mexican red

griffo

mootos

blowing smoke

siddi

good giggles

bobo bush

black bart

black gunion

funny staff

railroad weed

m.j.

bambalacha

ghanja

tex-mex

gungun

taima

doradilla

Mary Warner

yen pop

Texas pot

dona Juanita

Canadian black

duros

sugar weed

griefo

santa Marta

weed tea

sinse

light stuff

jolly green

carmabis

Frequentie

C1
Uitgesproken als (IPA)
/ˈsɪzəz/
Etymologie (Engels)

From Middle English sisours, sisoures (attested since 1350–1400), from Old French cisoires, from Vulgar Latin *cīsōria, plural of Late Latin cīsōrium (“cutting tool”) (compare chisel); from Latin word root -cīsus (compare excise) or caesus, past participle of caedō (“to cut”). Partially displaced native Old English sċēara (“scissors, shears”), whence shears. * The current spelling, from the 16th century, is due to association with Medieval Latin scissor (“tailor”), from Latin carrying the meaning “carver, cutter”, from scindere (“to split”).

Related words
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scissor

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