Examples of using "Ołówek" in a sentence and their english translations:
Sharpen your pencil.
I've lost my pencil.
- Have you got a pencil?
- Do you have a pencil?
You dropped your pencil.
Put down your pencil.
And the pencil's really a thing that, I think,
- Have you got a pencil?
- Do you have a pencil?
- I've lost my pencil.
- I have lost my pencil.
Whose pencil is this?
May I sharpen my pencil?
Tom picked up a pencil.
I sharpened a pencil with a knife.
- Have you got a pencil?
- Do you have a pencil?
This is a pencil.
Would you lend me a pencil?
Where is the pencil?
Pick up the pencil from the floor.
- That's my pencil.
- This is my pencil.
Could I borrow a pencil?
Tom lost his pencil.
Is this pencil yours?
Would you lend me your pencil?
There is a pencil for everyone,
Now, just like when you were a kid and you'd break your pencil
His pencil has a sharp point.
Where are the book and the pencil?
How long is this pencil?
- Where are the book and the pencil?
- Where is the book and the pencil?
Is the pencil long?
May I borrow your pencil?
Is this pencil yours?
She took her pencil and started to write.
That other pencil is mine.
and every pencil has a story.
"May I use this pencil?" "Yes, you may."
She lost her pencil at school.
The pencil I lost yesterday was an old one.
Tom took out a pencil and started to write.
- Please give me a pen and some sheets of paper.
- Please give me a pen and some pieces of paper.
If you want a pencil, I'll lend you one.
"May I use this pencil?" "Yes, you may."
Pocket calculators are as cheap to buy as a pair of socks, and as essential to thousands of British school children as a pencil and eraser.