It would be more correct to use "in" than "on". But rather than using "drawing" it might be better to use the word "illustration" or "figure" unless you were referring to an actual drawing as a piece of artwork.
It is normally "shown in the figure" (an image or drawing).
It is possible to say "shown on the figure" to indicate an object or feature on a three-dimensional figure.
yes
This grammar question depends on the time sense of the statement. For yesterday's experiment, we say 'was shown'. For the anticipated experiment, 'is [expected to be] shown' would be proper. Both are correct, but they are used in different situations. "is shown" is a Present Tense in the Passive Voice, whereas "was shown" is a Past Tense Passive.
That is the correct spelling of the word "depiction" (representation, or a drawing).
That is the correct spelling of "pulling" (dragging, drawing toward).
You already "figured" it out. (That is the correct spelling.)
The correct spelling is "appreciated" (shown gratitude).
Shown in drawing and shown on drawing can mean the same thing. These statements would both indicate that the concept is shown somewhere within the drawing.
If the meaning of "drawing" is the raffle or lottery sort, then "would like to be entered into the" sounds grammatically correct. If you mean drawing as in "pencil sketch," it sounds shaky. If "drawing" is a part of the body, you're on your own, pal.
Has shown is correct.
Has shown is correct.
This grammar question depends on the time sense of the statement. For yesterday's experiment, we say 'was shown'. For the anticipated experiment, 'is [expected to be] shown' would be proper. Both are correct, but they are used in different situations. "is shown" is a Present Tense in the Passive Voice, whereas "was shown" is a Past Tense Passive.
had shown
single part drawing
The answer depends on information shown in the drawing. No answer is possible, since the drawing is not visible from here.
13 sides
.125 STOCK
correct
No, the term "drawing on water" is a verb + a prepositional phrase. A sentence must have a subject (who or what is drawing on water).