Drawers
Encyclopedia
Drawer or Drawers may refer to:
  • Drawer (furniture)
  • A person who engages in drawing
    Drawing
    Drawing is a form of visual art that makes use of any number of drawing instruments to mark a two-dimensional medium. Common instruments include graphite pencils, pen and ink, inked brushes, wax color pencils, crayons, charcoal, chalk, pastels, markers, styluses, and various metals .An artist who...

     pictures
  • Payor, a person who draws a bill of exchange
  • Undergarment
    Undergarment
    Undergarments or underwear are clothes worn under other clothes, often next to the skin. They keep outer garments from being soiled by bodily secretions and discharges, shape the body, and provide support for parts of it. In cold weather, long underwear is sometimes worn to provide additional...

    , underwear
  • Drawer test
    Drawer test
    The drawer test is a test used by physicians to detect rupture of the cruciate ligaments in the knee. The patient should be supine with the hips flexed to 45 degrees, the knees flexed to 90 degrees and the feet flat on table. The examiner sits on the patient's feet and grasps the patient's tibia...

    , a test used to detect rupture of the cruciate ligaments in the knee
  • The drawer, one of four Jaquet-Droz automata
    Jaquet-Droz automata
    The Jaquet-Droz automata, among all the numerous automata built by the Jaquet-Droz family, refer to three doll automata built between 1768 and 1774 by Pierre Jaquet-Droz, his son Henri-Louis and Jean-Frédéric Leschot: the musician, the draughtsman and the writer...

  • Cash drawer
    Cash drawer
    A cash drawer is generally a compartment underneath a cash register in which the cash from transactions is kept. The drawer typically contains a removable till. The till is usually divided into compartments used to store each denomination of bank notes and coins separately to make counting easier...

  • Drawer, the file system directories in the Workbench
    Workbench (AmigaOS)
    -Overview:Commodore named their Amiga computer's first operating system Workbench 1.0 and continued with the Workbench name until version 3.1, when it was changed to AmigaOS, prompted by Apple renaming their propriety OS from "System" to "MacOS"...

    component of the Amiga computer Operating System
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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