No, it does not. If you draw a horizontal line through it ("deed") you won't see the symmetry. But if you make "DEED" by capitalizing the letters, yes it will. Draw a line left to right through the middle of the letters and you have a line of horizontal symmetry.
Oh, dude, a word that has a horizontal line of symmetry is "NOON." It's like a palindrome, but fancier because you can fold it in half horizontally and it still looks the same. So, next time you're playing word games, just drop "NOON" and watch everyone be like, "Whoa, that word is symmetrical AF."
Horizontal.
Vertical means up and down. A horizontal line goes from the left to the right (or from the right to the left) like this: ----------------------------- A horizontal line goes from a position that is low to a position that is high (or from a position that is high to a position that is low) like this: | | | | | | | | But the word "vertical" does not tell you which direction the line is drawn, just the it is a line.
another word for horizontal is modif
the word horizontal means: flat or level: a horizontal position. "The line is horizontal to the ground" would work.....
a ruling line is a ruler in Microsoft Word that is consisted of the vertical and horizontal rules on a page
Which best describes the line of symmetry in the letter d
No, it does not. If you draw a horizontal line through it ("deed") you won't see the symmetry. But if you make "DEED" by capitalizing the letters, yes it will. Draw a line left to right through the middle of the letters and you have a line of horizontal symmetry.
"Horizontal" means from side to side. It comes from the word "horizon" which is the line which divides the land from the sky; the line which the sun crosses when it sets.
Only the I has a horizontal line of symmetry. Visualize folding PIZZA in half through the letters. Only the I would fold down perfectly on top of itself, so it has a horizontal line of symmetry.
The definition of the word row is usually a fight.
emphasis and purpose
A separator or a horizontal line.
Icebox, decided
The term "horizon" existed before the naming of a horizontal line. The concept of the horizon, meaning the line where the earth meets the sky, has been around for centuries. The naming of a horizontal line likely came afterward as a way to describe a line that is parallel to the horizon.
papakole (horizontal lines above both a), 'elemu (horizontal line above the first e), or 'okole (horizontal line abovec the first o, this term is much more crass and impolite)