Secateurs

HAL9000

Lifer
Oct 17, 2010
22,021
3
76
Do people actually call them "grass scissors"?!

Awful.

What do you call secateurs?
 

mcurphy

Diamond Member
Feb 5, 2003
4,150
8
81
OK already, we get it, Neckbeard. Your British English and our American English have different terms and pronunciations for the same items. How many stupid threads do you need to start about the differences between Britain and America?
 

HAL9000

Lifer
Oct 17, 2010
22,021
3
76
OK already, we get it, Neckbeard. Your British English and our American English have different terms and pronunciations for the same items. How many stupid threads do you need to start about the differences between Britain and America?

"Grass Scissors" isn't an American thing... Mmmkay?
 

MarkXIX

Platinum Member
Jan 3, 2010
2,642
1
71
Well bloody hell?! Football? What do you right lovin' chaps call football then? Crack on wankas!

We get it. We get it.

Oh, and this:

http://www.translatebritish.com/

Stop shitting on my forums with your inane ramblings about differences in our variants of the English language.
 
Last edited:

BoomerD

No Lifer
Feb 26, 2006
66,258
14,675
146
Oh look...YANTABDIELU

(Yet Another Neckbeard Thread About Differences in English Language Usage)

It's funny that he's using a French word with a latin origin to argue what word is more appropriate in English...:p

Secateurs =/= shears

but yeah grass scissors is a stupid name.

What about a rake? Is that a lawn comb? o_O

The various dictionaries disagree with you.

Secateur = Shears. (pruning shears, not sheep shears)

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/secateur

Definition of SECATEUR

chiefly British
: pruning shears —usually used in plural
Origin of SECATEUR

French sécateur, from Latin secare to cut
First Known Use: 1881

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/secateurs

secateurs [sek-uh-ter, -tur]  
sec·a·teurs   [sek-uh-ter, -tur] Show IPA
noun ( used with a singular or plural verb ) Chiefly British .
scissors or shears, especially pruning shears.
Origin:
1880–85; < French < Latin sec ( &#257;re ) to cut ( see secant) + French -ateurs (plural) < Latin -&#257;tor -ator

World English Dictionary
secateurs (&#712;s&#603;k&#601;t&#601;z, &#716;s&#603;k&#601;&#712;t&#604;&#720;z)

— pl n
chiefly ( Brit ) a small pair of shears for pruning, having a pair of pivoted handles, sprung so that they are normally open, and usually a single cutting blade that closes against a flat surface

[C19: plural of French sécateur, from Latin sec&#257;re to cut]
 

WelshBloke

Lifer
Jan 12, 2005
33,072
11,250
136
Oh look...YANTABDIELU

(Yet Another Neckbeard Thread About Differences in English Language Usage)

It's funny that he's using a French word with a latin origin to argue what word is more appropriate in English...:p



The various dictionaries disagree with you.

Secateur = Shears. (pruning shears, not sheep shears)

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/secateur



http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/secateurs

I was pointing out to Hal that this

pXkUzYNuAhNPJlGKgfNGfFhYI28p7Ywh_NNmntsPidDb5V--sU6L6FkWqx4F2ExAXs_Tlkfs3005wWdQ6DeyEXnDc0gkVp5YHbyJUeeikKe4FZqRHRIzFll8-Aoe3QcHa9aDtIbwKOo9Bv_25L68Dgbp5niDZTwjlkVEw1FgtQcztcQ


is different to this

ADDWjLjXz-x0WDJXCCfUW_3HdQfrDEqm7PB-kWkymoARI62aRrl8UP6nFJ1E_3GVGlq0sB4stXPdgLkq0ddbPTOXplWmkqiH_OZ9eitVRvRGpFguQQipAe6izB5Ic1jVz-sQslsM9-mPu5hAh_gQwGjpQaTENI-X0u02Hv9k9MRUjlvJkHclL6jUW7X0NTe5fKxaK_VpnVjMIiUDjDXUYj7Jrjbg


As he was equating the two in his OP.

In the UK where both Hal and I are from the former is a set of garden shears the second is a set of secateurs.

They are both types of shears as are nail scissors but I thought the context of the OP would have made a further explanation unnecessary. I was obviously wrong.
 

BrokenVisage

Lifer
Jan 29, 2005
24,771
14
81
Sounds like a race in Skyrim. I use to be an adventurer like the Secateurs, then I took an arrow in the knee..
 

BoomerD

No Lifer
Feb 26, 2006
66,258
14,675
146

WelshBloke

Lifer
Jan 12, 2005
33,072
11,250
136
Either way no one calls the long pointy ones secateurs, that's what I was pointing out to Hal. :D

And I still think grass scissors is a dumb name. :)