180 degrees would look like a straight line if viewing it in the form of an angle. It is also defined as the exact opposite direction of the initial direction.
Not possible ! MHz is a measure of frequency, km is a unit of distance - while gigabits is a quantity of memory.
Yes. Draw the letter H on a piece of paper and turn it upside down. You'll notice that it still looks like an H. It does not have 90 degree (or 270 degree) rotational symmetry, though - if you turn it sideways, it looks like a weird elongated I.
The symbol that looks like a star is called an asterisk. It looks like this *.
The degrees of unknown angles on triangles are represented by thieta, the symbol for which looks like a 0 with a line through it. The degrees of a triangles angles all add up to 180 degress.
5
a line that is 180 degrees. it looks like ______.______ it looks bacialy flat
Gigabits are also called Gbps
1.9 gigabits is 1,900 megabits.
Express Card @ 2.5 Gigabits per second USB 3.0 @ 5 Gigabits per second eSATA @ 6 Gigabits per second Thunderbolt @ 10 Gigabits per second
180 degrees would look like a straight line if viewing it in the form of an angle. It is also defined as the exact opposite direction of the initial direction.
A straight angle is exactly 180 degrees. It looks like a straight line.
Looks like a U. Which is why it's called a U-turn. A half turn would be 180 degrees.
Not possible ! MHz is a measure of frequency, km is a unit of distance - while gigabits is a quantity of memory.
Claude looks like he weigh over 229 Tommy looks like he weighs 200 Cj looks like he weighs around 159 and 165 Tony looks like he weighs around 189 and 192 Vic looks like he weighs between 180 and 200 Niko he looks like he weighs i would say between 150 and 165 Johnny i would say around 185 Luis i would say between 185 and 200 Franklin i would say around 199 or 200 Micheal i would say between 150 and 180 Trevor i would say Similar to Cjs Weight
Angles have degrees but lines don't. An angle of 180 degrees looks like a straight line.
http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=5+gigabits+in+megabits 5120 megabits in 5 gigabits