All lines are not the same length in a limerick poem. To be a limerick, the first, second, and fifth lines have three metrical feet and lines three and four have two metrical feet. Also, the endings of lines one, two, and five rhyme, and the endings of lines three and four rhyme.
In geometry, lines are of infinite length. So, yes, parallel lines have the same length. They are completely 'G' rated at all times. They never touch.
paraell lines
no because an arrowhead has to long lines and to small lines
it uses lines roughly the same length though meter is irregular
They're all the same length, they converge at the poles.
All lines of longitude run from North pole to South pole, and are all the same length.
5
3 differnet types of triangles 1. Equilateral triangle (all lines are same length and every angle is 60 degrees) 2. Isoceles triangle (2 of the 3 lines are the same length and all 3 angles add to 180 degrees. 3. Scalene triangle (all 3 lines are different length but all angles add to 180) Hope I helped
no\ * * * * * Wrong answer! A parallelogram has two pairs of parallel lines, in which opposite sides are of equal length. A rhombus also has two pairs of parallel lines and, in addition, they are all of the same length.
A free verse poem has no specific rhyme scheme or meter, allowing for more freedom in the structure and form of the poem. In contrast, a limerick is a specific type of poem with a distinct rhyme scheme (AABBA) and meter, often humorous and consisting of five lines.
1. All angles are right-angles. 2. All lines are parallel. 3. 2 pairs of 2 lines are the same length.