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its called the bounding box :P
Directly it shows the distance of an object from a fixed point (usually the origin) at various times. The gradient of the tangent to the graph (where it exists) shows the velocity of the object and the second derivative (again, if it exists), gives the acceleration.
that would indicate that the object is at rest (static object) :D
That the object being studied is accelerating in the radial direction.
It shows you the view of an object above eye level with a perspective as though you were and ant or something else that is small :)
ask jesus.
Professionals prefer multi-view drawings over pictorial drawings so that it'll be easier for them to make the object. Since multi-view shows how the object looks like on all the sides and pictorial drawing only shows it from one angle. you right in the
if you are referring to technical drawing Isometric drawings show three sides
A topographic map shows the three dimensions of the earths surface.
Oblique drawings are designed to show a three dimensional view of an object. It is a kind of a drawing that shows one face of the object in true shape, but the other faces on a distorted angle. Oblique is not really a '3D' system but a 2 dimensional view of an object with 'forced depth'.
It seems there may be a typo in your question. If you meant to ask about the "Chinese language," it is a group of related languages spoken by people in China and various other countries. It includes dialects like Mandarin, Cantonese, and others that are mutually unintelligible but share common writing systems and cultural heritage.
I would understand that to be a drawing that shows true dimensions from three views. Engineering uses this to define a part. It usually has the object viewed from the 3 sides.
I would understand that to be a drawing that shows true dimensions from three views. Engineering uses this to define a part. It usually has the object viewed from the 3 sides.
A diragram that shows the inside and outside of an object.
Topographic map
"relief"
Topographic Map