Yes
No, lines of longitude are as parallel to each other as the earth is flat. All longitudes intersect at the north and south poles.
because they merge at the poles... they seem to be parallel near the equtor region..n remenber parallel lines nver meet each other... n due to the shape of our earth these lines merge at poles...
Lines are parallel when they remain equal distance apart from one another and they never intersect with each other.
They are equal distance from one another.
two parallel lines are crossed by another line ,that's the perpendicular.
No
A line of constant longitude is often called a "meridian". A line of constant latitude is often called a "parallel".
Each line of latitude (the ones parallel to the Equator) crosses each line of longitude (the north - south lines).
A Parallel - because they are imaginary lines that run around the earth parallel to the equator
All lines of latitude are parallel with the equator.
The 60th parallel South is a line of latitude crossing all lines of longitude.
they aren't because the earth is round deerrhh!
A mercator projection is a cylindrical map which was developed as a navigation tool. It displays line of longitude as parallel to each other.
-- Each meridian ( 'line' ) of longitude represents all of the infinite number of points on the Earth's surface that have that one specific longitude. -- Each parallel ( 'line' ) of latitude represents all of the infinite number of points on the Earth's surface that have that one specific latitude.
Every line of constant latitude is parallel to all others. That's why they're often called "parallels" of latitude.
That would be latitude or longitude.
because they merge at the poles... they seem to be parallel near the equtor region..n remenber parallel lines nver meet each other... n due to the shape of our earth these lines merge at poles...
Lines are parallel when they remain equal distance apart from one another and they never intersect with each other.