Grid line in MS-Word are a series of lines running up and down and back and forth in a way that looks sort of like a checker board. They are useful for helping you line up text and pictures with each other.
they're the four squares that make up the coordinate grid.
It normally means to make an object of some kind line up to a grid reference. IE icons on a windows desktop. Imagine an invisible grid, and when you arrange by type or name the icons snap to that grid. Another example is drawing on graph paper.
No.
Yes, all geometry planes are infinite and have lines going in every direction, except it doesn't look like that when you see a grid because they only need to include some information for a certain part of a line of the plane. All lines go forever in each direction (left and right), and a grid is made up of lines.
Lines of latitude and the lines of longitude.
Lines of latitude and the lines of longitude.
Lines of longitude and latitude
grid system
Grid
If you mean the 'lines' that make up the grid, then they are co-ordinate sections. For example: if I told you to go to A2, that section may display a piece of China.
they are lines that go up and down then the other one is the line that goes left to right
Grid line in MS-Word are a series of lines running up and down and back and forth in a way that looks sort of like a checker board. They are useful for helping you line up text and pictures with each other.
When you look at a worksheet in Excel you can see all the cells, because of the lines around them. Those are gridlines. You can also add borders, to make heavier lines around cells. Gridlines can be turned off completely, by going to the Options menu and the View section and removing the tick beside Gridlines.
lines of lattitude extend up the y axis but are parallel to/on the x axis
step up transmission
a system of rectangular excavation or sampling units laid over a site by strings and stakes.