When the toy chest is empty, there is less mass to overcome inertia, making it easier to push. A full toy chest has more mass and therefore more inertia, requiring more force to move it.
The amount of horizontal force needed to keep a box sliding along a horizontal floor is equal to the product of the coefficient of kinetic friction between the box and the floor and the normal force pushing up on the box from the floor, which is equal to the weight of the box. As long as the characteristics of the box and the floor remain the same (neither is polished, lubricated, etc.), the coefficient of kinetic friction remains constant. Therefore, the horizontal force needed to keep the box moving across the floor is directly proportional to the weight of the box.
The muscle that separates the chest from the abdomen and forms the floor of the thorax is called the diaphragm.
The ballroom floor is empty....lets dance I could have danced with you all night But your eyes were like an empty ballroom floor..... By Given the Day from In search of Eden
IN a chest on the second floor
On the 75th floor of Zero Isle North, along with two Wonder Gummis and an EXP-boosting hold item, the Wonder Chest.
you click y0ur tresure chest and drag your floor
It is easier to pull a heavy load that is on wheels or rollers, than to carry the weight, or drag the load along the floor.
Top Piece - Ground floor - The chest at the bottom of the staircase Middle Piece - Ground floor - At the end of the Boy's corridor in the chest Bottom Piece - Up the hall from Victor's office, in the chest on the left
diaphragm
the jaguar lives on the forest floor because it prefers an easier catch on the forest floor.
To effectively perform a chest crunch exercise to target your chest muscles, lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor. Place your hands behind your head or across your chest. Engage your core muscles and lift your shoulders off the floor, squeezing your chest muscles as you crunch upwards. Lower back down with control and repeat for desired repetitions.