it is called a quickle
Wiki User
∙ 10y agoNicknames for the name Robert are Rob, Robbie, Bob, Bobbie, Bobby. A particular type of hair pin is a "bobby pin" or "bobbie pin".
1. First stick the bobby pin on the door lock. 2.Then twist the bobby pin.
the bobby pin
A bobby pin can suspend in honey due to the honey's high viscosity creating resistance to the pin's movement through it. The honey's sticky properties also help to adhere the bobby pin to the surrounding honey molecules.
it is called the endpin
To pick a lock with a bobby pin, you can bend one end into a slight curve to create a tension wrench and use the other end to manipulate the pins. Insert the tension wrench into the keyhole to apply slight pressure while using the other end of the bobby pin to push up on the pins until they align and the lock opens. It requires practice and patience to master the technique.
A bobby pin typically weighs around 1 gram.
To construct one of these we bent the straight side of a Bobby pin out and up over the top and toward the back. We then kept going until it formed a double loop and hooked the tip behind the crimped side of the Bobby pin
yeah just take a bobby pin and open it so its in the v shape.then weave your hair throught it and put a straightner on it for like 2 seconds and then take the bobby pin out
I use a floss stick and scrape it down my nose. It works great! And for the corners use the rounded end of a Bobby pin.
the bobby pin
AnswerThe "bobby pin" came into wide use as the hairstyle known as the "bob cut" or "bobbed hair" took hold. This trend gained popularity in the 1920s, and the bobby pins kept the bobbed hair in place.(from wikipedia)Also from Wikipedia - "A trademark on the term "bobby pin" was held for some decades by Bob Lépine Corporation of Buffalo, New York." So it is the original name the pin was marketed under, probably based on the name of the corporation and/or the person the company is named after.Similarly, the British term "kirby grip" is derived from the trademark Kirbigrip, used by a Birmingham (UK) manufacturer of such pins, Kirby, Beard & Co. Ltd.[1]