The colonists were instructed by the British not to cross the imaginary north to south line they projected down the crest of the Appalachian Mountains. This was done to prevent attacks by the Native American tribes that lived in the west. A lot of colonists rejected this rule and moved west anyway.
Well you would simply stop before the sign, meaning that there is an imaginary stop-line that extends from any stop sign, and you must stop before you cross that line.
no because it has lengthIn complex geometry, an imaginary line is a straight line that only contains one real point.
The "Line of Symmetry" is the imaginary line where you could fold the image or shape and have both halves match exactly one half is a reflection of the other
it is a line
the line of reflection
Proclamation of 1763
The Prime Meridian is an imaginary line. All longitudes are reckoned as angles from it, and all parallels of latitude cross it.
An imaginary number. Think of imaginary numbers as being on a vertical line while real numbers are on a horizontal line. (the lines cross at zero). Adding and subtracting won't change the axis.
The Royal Proclamation of 1763 was issued by King George and said that no colonist could beyond an imaginary line near the Appalachian Mountains. The purpose was to stabilize relations with the Native Americans.
the equator is the imaginary line
The Axis is a Imaginary Line.
the equator is the imaginary line around the earth.
Well you would simply stop before the sign, meaning that there is an imaginary stop-line that extends from any stop sign, and you must stop before you cross that line.
Follow the <Related Link> below for several maps and information articles all related to the International Dateline.
The Proclamation of 1763 established a Proclamation Line along the Appalachians, which the colonists were not allowed to cross.
no because it has lengthIn complex geometry, an imaginary line is a straight line that only contains one real point.
it is a line