What is the preposition after draw?

draw

English? [doctor? ] beautiful? [doctor? ]? ?

Verb (short for verb)? Drag; Approaching; Painting; Excerpts; Pull; draw

Noun (short for noun)? A draw; Draw lots; Pull; Drag; Something attractive

(1) The phrase composed of draw and preposition is as follows:

Imitate the mother? Much like mom.

Draw opposition? use for reference ...

Draw along the street? Drag along the street

Painting at the door? Stop at home

Draw between? Draw a line between … ...

Open the distance between the enemy and me? Distinguish between the enemy and ourselves

Pull with a rope? Drag with a rope

Who are you painting for? call together

Lucky draw? draw for a prize

From where? Draw out [pull out, take out, absorb] from.

Delimit? Absorb into, draw into (silk)

Involve sb in a quarrel? Involve sb. In an argument

Draw it? Involve ... in ...

Walking towards the town? Go to that town.

Learn from someone's experience? According to my own experience.

(2) The specific usage of painting

Draw has two basic meanings: one is "painting"; The second is "pull". When doing "painting", it means drawing sketches, lines and maps with pencils, crayons and chalk. Extension can be "description" or "drawing a clear line between right and wrong". The second meaning of draw is "pull", which means to pull continuously, steadily, calmly and gently to exert force or pull forward or drag. Extension can refer to pulling out, taking out, extracting, absorbing, attracting or inferring.

A draw can also mean a "draw", which means that both opponents use the same skills in games, performances and wars, and it is difficult to decide the outcome.

Draw can be used as a transitive verb or an intransitive verb. When used as a transitive verb, it can be used as an object with a noun or pronoun or as a double object. Its indirect object can be transformed into the object of the preposition for, and it can also be followed by adjectives or infinitives as the compound object of complement. When used as an intransitive verb, its active form can have passive meaning.

Example:

Our car broke down and we had to tow it to the garage.

Our car broke down and had to be towed to the garage.

This season is coming to an end.

The noisy social season is coming to an end.

Mary drew a house on paper.

Mary drew a house on paper.

I want to withdraw some money from my account.

I want to withdraw some deposits.

Can you close the curtains?

Can you close the curtains?