Some office supply websites call them 'mechanical pencils', Merghan, but I've never heard anyone use that term in real life.
I don't think there's anything better than propelling pencil - formal or informal.
Rover
Hi,
Could you please give me the informal name for "propelling pencil"? Especially in BrE.
Many thanks.
Some office supply websites call them 'mechanical pencils', Merghan, but I've never heard anyone use that term in real life.
I don't think there's anything better than propelling pencil - formal or informal.
Rover
1. Is "lead pencil" a right synonym?
2. Would you please give me some collocations used with it? For example, should I say, 'I've run out of lead!', 'Have you got any extra lead?', 'I need to change the lead', or, 'My lead pencil takes 0.7 leads.'?
(Not a teacher)
Here in NZ, I've only ever heard the terms 'mechanical pencil' and 'clutch pencil' (the latter not since my student days doing Tech. drawing).
ZCould anyone please check my sentences? I mean the collocations. Thanks a lot in advance.
As a BrE speaker, I have only ever heard "propelling pencil" and "mechanical pencil".
As for me, this is the first time I've ever seen the term "propelling pencil." The only one I've ever known is "mechanical pencil."
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
Thanks to all dear posters. Due to my imperfect knowledge of English I was thinking English speakers in this case (which to me sounds as a word of high frequency) might use the reduction form of "clipping" and change the word into something like "prop" instead of "propelling pencil". Is it probable that some students use this new form in contemporary English? Thanks.