Whatever you want.
For ironworking, a bar used to pry I beams in place.
One would properly use a pry bar by inserting the flattened edge as leverage against something. A pry bar is used for "prying" something open, or away from itself.
As a lever to pry things up.
Both are for prying things apart, the flat pry bar is used to make sufficient room to fit the crow bar in place.
To hit or pry something to move it from where it is at. Such as--> I used a pry bar to dislodge the rusty nail from the wall.
The point at which the pry bar pivots is called the fulcrum. It is the fixed point around which the pry bar rotates to exert force on an object.
with a pry bar with a pry bar
A tool for pulling things out is a pry bar or a claw hammer.
It would probably help if you just used a pry bar.
It is used as a lever to either force apart two objects or to remove nails.
Pull using something else as leverage as in with a pry bar.
Yes, a pry bar pivot can be considered a type of fulcrum. A fulcrum is a point around which a lever pivots, and in the case of a pry bar, the pivot point acts as the fulcrum to help generate force for lifting or prying objects.