The bottom half of the wheels
The bottom of the wheels.
Force only takes place in the direction of the motion. It cannot be any other way. It could be argued that the action of a cars tyres on the road applies to your question. The car moves forward while the tyres push the earth in the opposite direction. However the tyres are the motion supplying the force and not the car moving in the opposite direction..
To turn anything clockwise means to turn it in the same direction as the hands of a clock appear to rotate. That means, the upper part of the knob facing you moves right, while the lower part facing you moves left. The right part facing you moves down while the left part facing you moves up.
The caudal direction refers to the tail end or posterior part of the body in anatomy. It is the opposite of the cranial direction, which refers to the head or anterior part of the body.
A "tailward" direction when talking about animals
Shearing force refers to the force that is applied when one part of the body moves in one direction while an adjacent part moves in the opposite direction. In the context of moving someone, shearing force can result in skin friction and tissue damage if the person is dragged or moved in a way that causes opposing forces on different parts of their body. It is important to minimize shearing forces when moving someone to prevent injury.
Definitely to the left inside the train; but actually they are in the train and when the train goes right they oughta go the same way
For example, when you have a spring you pull it, and some of it is tight together, and some is spread out. The spread out part is called a Rarefaction and the tight part is compression. The direction it moves is movement of wave, and the opposite side is the movement of coil.
Just like any other rocket. The main difference is that the nozzle(and the direction of thrust) of a retro rocket is aimed in the opposite direction when compared to the main direction of travel. That's where the retro part comes in.
it all starts at the firebox and moves down to the boiler then out the pistons and the lefover steam goes up the stack.
No, because a line goes forever in opposite directions of each other. A ray goes forever in one direction.
No, "back" is not a proper noun. It is a common noun used to refer to the rear part of something or the opposite direction of forward.