An acute angle
Since a clock hand turns 360 degrees in 60 minutes, it will move 30 degrees in 5 minutes and 120 degrees in 20 minutes.
It is 360/67 = 5 degrees 22 minutes and 23.28 seconds
It is: 23 degrees+67 degrees = 90 degrees
Yes because 67 degrees is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees
40 minutes is 0.667 degrees.
To divide 82 degrees 30 minutes by 7 degrees 30 minutes, first convert both angles into a single unit, such as degrees. 82 degrees 30 minutes is equivalent to 82.5 degrees, and 7 degrees 30 minutes is equivalent to 7.5 degrees. Performing the division, 82.5 ÷ 7.5 equals 11. This result indicates how many times 7 degrees 30 minutes fits into 82 degrees 30 minutes.
Degrees: ° Minutes: ' Seconds: "
One Degree has 60 minutes. 130 minutes are ?1 Degree 30 minutes13 Degrees2 Degrees 30 minutes2 Degrees 10 minutes
It moves through 15 degrees every 30 minutes.
The distance between 45 degrees and 45 degrees 30 minutes north is half a degree or 30 nautical miles.
67 degress is probably the highest it going to get. 37 is going to be the lowest it will get.
127 degrees 30 minutes 30 seconds = 127.5083333...degrees (the 3s never end)
The coordinates 18 degrees 15 minutes north, 77 degrees 30 minutes west correspond to a location in the Caribbean Sea, specifically southeast of Cuba and northwest of Jamaica.
Baking is an exact type of food science that requires precise measurements of ingredients, time, and heat. If you want to cook something at 375 degrees what was originally supposed to bake for 30 minutes at 450 you would need to bake it for 60 minutes at 375.
Yes.
The dead sea is placed at 32 degrees 30 minutes North, 35 degrees 30 minutes East. That makes the closest point on the equator be 0 degrees North, 35 degrees 30 minutes East. Therefore its distance from the equator is 32 degrees and 30 minutes, which are 3614 kilometers. Please see the related links for the data and calculator I have used to find this out.
55 degrees, 58 minutes, 28 seconds s, and 67 degrees, 17 minutes, 20 seconds w...from someone who sailed around it.