In general, no; Mac OS X keeps no record of items you've copied in the past. That's not to say that nothing does. For example, Quicksilver (qs.blacktree.com) is able to watch your clipboard and keeps up to 10 recent items on hand.
When you copy or cut something it is stored into memory. This is known as the Clipboard. From there it can be pasted to other locations. The clipboard is capable of holding multiple items for pasting.
Removing a selected item from a document and placing it in a clipboard is called cutting and pasting. Microsoft Office Clipboard allows up to 24 text or graphics to be copied and pasted into another document.
Pasting.
pasting
the process of copying an item from the clipboard into the document at the location of the insertion point is cutting
pasting
office clip board
The 'clipboard'. It's an area of computer memory used to store text that's been selected by the 'copy' funtion.
It depends on file. Some files have protection and do not allows pasting information in the clipboard (buffer). Also it might be just a software bug.
The first thing you have to do to remove an item from a document is highlight it. Then, right click on it and click on the cut word.
The system clipboard is a list of files stored in memory that you have chosen to copy or cut. This is only with objects like text or pictures, not files. Certain applications can access the clipboard to show you what is stored on it. In answer to your actual question, you cannot find the clipboard anywhere.
no