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Anything that is symmetrical about its horizontal centreline
y = 1. When the degree of your numerator is the same with the degree of your denominator, then y = the ratio of the leading coefficients of the numerator and denominator is the horizontal asymptote.
A degree is an angular measure and cannot be measured in millimetres. A 1 degree rise can be interpreted as a ratio of a rise (in millimetres) per a distance of horizontal displacement.
its 45 degree
Horizontal position is strate 90 degree
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90 degree
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An obtuse angle is an angle between 90 degrees and 180 degrees. A 180 degree angle is a straight horizontal line. So you can imagine that a 160 degree angle is almost but not quite horizontal.
The degree is equal to the maximum number of times the graph can cross a horizontal line.
Anything that is symmetrical about its horizontal centreline
The horizontal asymptote for y = 0 when the degree is greater than the denominator, resulting in the inability to do long division.
You can't find the resultant of two vectors without magnitudes as well as directions.
the axial plane of a recumbent fold is horizontal and one limb is rotated more than 90 degree and called overturned limb.
y = 1. When the degree of your numerator is the same with the degree of your denominator, then y = the ratio of the leading coefficients of the numerator and denominator is the horizontal asymptote.