hammer - nail screwdriver - screw
The force of the hammer is much greater than the force of the nail. Gravity pulls down the hammer, hits the nail, and the nail forces up, but the force of gravity wins over the force pulling on the nail.
I also wanna
analogy is comparison of two question
The purpose of analogy is to explain or clarify. When you make an analogy, you make comparisons between two things.
Assert : Deny what would that analogy be?
nail
The analogy would be: screw is to wrench as scrap is to "screwdriver."
I will strike the nail with the hammer. I strike the nail with the hammer. I struck the nail with the hammer. I have struck the nail with the hammer.
When you hit a nail with a hammer, the force is applied at the point of contact between the hammer and the nail. This force drives the nail into the surface it is being hammered into.
The force of the hammer is much greater than the force of the nail. Gravity pulls down the hammer, hits the nail, and the nail forces up, but the force of gravity wins over the force pulling on the nail.
a hammer
nothing
nail forcing the hammer
After the hammer hits the nail, its momentum is transferred to the nail causing it to move. Momentum is conserved in the system, meaning that the total momentum of the hammer and nail before and after the collision remains the same.
hammer
The claw hammer can not only hammer a nail into wood but can , by way of the claw , grasp the head of the nail and be used to pry/leverage the nail from wood .
Depending on what you are using the hammer for. If the hammer is been used to pull up a nail then yes but if its been used to hammer in a nail then no. For something to be a lever it must have a fulcrum which the curve on the hammer works as as you try to pull out a nail.