This is an example of a metaphor, because it is comparing to things. It is comparing the locked drawer to a magnet.
the paper is inside the top drawer of the cabinet
i pried open the painted window. it was so hard
The word 'calmly' is none of the above, calmly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Examples:Mother calmly held out her hand for my cellphone, and she calmly locked it in her desk drawer. Then, speaking very calmly, she said, "Meet me here on Sunday when I will be unlocking this drawer."
Start your car and go back in the house but make sure your car is locked and running with the heat on full blast and then pray to God that you have a second key in the drawer in the kitchen beside the drawer that has the pencils and pens that is under the phone. If you do, then after about 10 minutes go out to your car and start driving. If you don't, i laff because u locked your keys in the car.
Someone could of left the drawer open for a period of time, and it could of crawled in and stayed there, locked inside. Or there could be a hole somewhere on the outside!
Hopefully, you can see the numbers that are on the lock itself. Take those to a locksmith and often they will have the key. This is most usually true for office type filing cabinets.
There are conditions left out of the question: both men know which drawer has the bomb, and they don't care if they get blown up along with the man if he picks the drawer with the bomb. -- The man would ask either of the other two this question: "If I ask the other guy, what drawer will he tell me has the key?" No matter which one answers, they are telling him the wrong drawer, and the key is in the other drawer. He just picks the other drawer. The liar will lie, and tell him the wrong drawer, since he knows that the truth-teller will say the correct drawer. The truth-teller will also tell him the wrong drawer, because he knows the liar will lie and tell him the wrong one. (see the related question, which has several versions of this puzzle as related questions)
1. His drawer 2. Under his bed 3. In his socks 4. In a locked briefcase 5. In a hole in the backyard 6. His safe 7. In his bank account
No, but it does have a newer feature called Draw Commander. You can set it up, so drawing a "c" for example on the locked screen could go to the camera, for example.
keeping data in a password-protected database, storing images in a secured cabinet, and coding data or specimens and keeping the key to the code in a separate, locked drawer.
These sorts of behaviors are closely associated with Obsessive-compulsive Disorder.
you dont get locked in the museum