an owl
its owl
Rotating a figure 270 degrees is like rotating the figure to the left 90 degrees. I am not sure what formula or rule you use. *Joe Jonas Rocks*
270 degrees is 3/4 of the way around the circle. Ir is the same as rotating it 90 degrees (1/4) of the way clockwise. Turn it so anything that was pointing straight up would be pointing to the right.
AB --clockwise-------------\ B C ----------------------------/ AC AB --counter-clockwise--\ CA C ----------------------------/ B
an owl
its owl
270 an owl can turn its head up to 270 degrees.
You dont, its just 90 degrees 3 times..
Rotating a figure 270 degrees is like rotating the figure to the left 90 degrees. I am not sure what formula or rule you use. *Joe Jonas Rocks*
270 degrees is 3/4 of the way around the circle. Ir is the same as rotating it 90 degrees (1/4) of the way clockwise. Turn it so anything that was pointing straight up would be pointing to the right.
A dingo can turn its head up to 270 degrees
Owls in general are famous for this ability.
Community Answer 1An owl can turn its head between 180 and maybe 270 degrees.______________________________________________Community Answer 2They cannot turn their heads 360 degrees. It just looks like they can because an owl can turn its head really far one direction, then snap its head around to the other direction faster than the human eye can follow.______________________________________________Community Answer 3An owl can turn it's head (and neck and backbone) about 270 degrees.______________________________________________Community Answer 4An owl is able to rotate its head 270 degrees in both directions. They rotate their heads because their large eyes are not able to move, and are fixed in their sockets.______________________________________________Community Answer 5Owls can rotate their heads 270 degrees, much more than half way around.
Move it 3 times* * * * *or once in the anti-clockwise direction.
You rotate everything to the left, 3/4 of a full turn.As an example of the result, the positive x-axis winds uppointing down from the origin.
No, its head would fall off. An owl can turn its head, on average 270 degrees, though this does vary between the owl species.