Drawer
来自Big Physics
wiktionary
From draw(“to move by pulling”) + -er; compare French tiroir. Attested from the 16th century. [1]
Middle English drawer, from draw + -er(“person or thing that does the action”). Attested from the 14th century. [2]
etymonline
drawer (n.)
mid-14c., "one who draws (water from a well, etc.); one who pulls, drags, or transports," agent noun from draw (v.). Also formerly "a waiter, bartender" (1560s). Attested from 1570s in sense of "a box-shaped receptacle that can be 'drawn' or pulled out of a cabinet, bureau, table, etc., by sliding it horizontally."