A wheel barrow u can put more things in Beacause it's bigger and a shovel is smaller and doesn't have wheels to move so u don't half to carry the things like a shovel has to
the shovel works by the action of pushing turning in upward force wich is how the shovel simply is used properly
When I was growing up on my Grandfather's farm we had many pails and buckets laying around. Pails were containers with larger bases than top openings (an upside down bucket) for carrying water and milk. Buckets were used to carry everything else. I don't think anyone makes pails anymore, since carrying water and milk are no longer a big part of farm life. No one confused a pail and a bucket where I grew up.The only difference is which end the bottom is on --the small end (bucket) or the large end (pail). Now it's settled.Jack
a sponge because it lets in some of the dirt and mess but it doesnt let in all of it as in a shovel doesnt really take in anything
A shovel is most often operated as a Class-III lever, typically in snow.
it's called a shovel
The homophone of pale is pail. The boy brought a pail and a shovel to the beach and made a sandcastle.
The little girl went to the beach and filled her pail with water.
Beah ball, shovel or pail, unbrella, sunglasses, bathing suit,
The homophone of "pale" is "pail." They are pronounced in the same way but have different meanings.
Pail: a sand bucket is a Pail. Pale: Pale is like when your face is flushed or turns a lighter color than what it normally is.
Mailbox is a boy and in Mailbox's Birthday he turns ten years old.
A volt is the amount of electricity available in the circuit - Picture a pail filled with water An Amp is the rate that electricity travels through the circuit - picture a hole in the pail of water - the rate that water escapes from the pail of water is amperage
pail a pail
Pail - like a water pail
Pail
A typical shovel holds about 1/2 cubic feet of soil. There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard (commonly called a "yard"). Therefore, about 54 shovelfuls in a cubic yard.Note that the volume of a shovel will vary depending on its size and the stuff being shoveled. You can determine the volume of your shovel by experimenting with a 5-gallon pail (equal to about 5/8 of a cubic foot).