Drag
The Buoyant Force is the upward force exerted on an object submerged in water. Anything less dense than the liquid it is submerged in tends to float. Anything that is more dense than the liquid that it is in tends to sink.
'Dragging' is the present participle of 'drag'
The frictional force on a sliding body on a plane will be acting parallel to the plane against the motion of the body. But the magnitude of the (kinetic) friction force is proportional to the weight component normal to the plane. The weight component parallel to the plane is the force that tends to slide the body down the inclined plane. When the sliding body has acquire steady velocity, the friction force is equal to the body's sliding force.
Friction is the force that holds back the movement of an object. It occurs when two surfaces are in contact and opposes the direction of motion, making it more difficult for the object to move.
As the distance is increased, statically induced charge in the uncharged object is reduced to a minimum. Thus coulombic force which is directly proportional to the product of the charges tends to 0
When an object moves through a gas or liquid, it experiences drag force, which is the resistance exerted by the fluid on the object. This drag force tends to slow down the object's motion. The amount of drag force depends on the object's shape, size, speed, and the properties of the fluid it is moving through.
Tensile force tends to pull a body apart by stretching or elongating it. This force acts in the opposite direction to compressive force, which tends to push a body together. Tensile force is commonly experienced in materials like ropes, cables, and springs.
torque or moment
It typically tends to
Compressive force is a force that tends to compress or shorten an object, while tensile force is a force that tends to stretch or elongate an object. In other words, compressive force pushes inward on an object, while tensile force pulls outward on an object.
the force that tends to make a moving bodies fly away to the center of rotation
It's a mechanical force exerted through a lever called an oar, acting through a fulcrum called a rowlock attached to the side of the boat. The rower pulls the oar towards the bow of the boat, which causes the other end of the oar to push back on the water. The water tends to stay where it is and there is a net forward force on the rowlock, which pushes the boat forwards.