Yes. lower case j does go below the bottom line
n
In the upper case: A, H, J (the line at the top), L, T In the lower case: t
it means: that bottle was that number in line after making. the lower the better.
You can think of bottom round management like just in time production. Bottom line management centers around achieving the financial bottom line first at the lowest cost. BRM or JIT focuses on fast, efficient, cost effective ways to produce your product or service at a lower cost with quality that the customer values. *I think*
The bottom line of a shape is the base of the shape. For example, the bottom line of a pyramid is the base of the pyramid.
Lower case numbers are numbers that sit in line with the lower case letters. some of the numbers sit on the line as in 0, 1, 2, etc. Others drop below the line as in 4,7,9, etc. You can see examples of lower case numbers in some US coinage.
Yes it also uses all the other lines too.
Lower case A doesn't have a line of symmetry. Upper case A has a vertical line of symmetry.
They aren't. Virgo looks like a lower case "m" with a lower-case "p" bumped up against it with the tail crossed over the the common line. Scorpio looks like a lower-case "m" with the end leg of the "m" extended below the line and turned up to the right at a 45 degree angle in what appears to be a tail..
In the lower case: no.
n
Low C is two below the bottom line. High C is between the third and fourth line if you count from the bottom line up.
alkene
Jaw line- The lower edge of the side of the face (below the cheek); defined by the jawbone.
yes!
In the upper case: A, H, J (the line at the top), L, T In the lower case: t
To make a capital Z in cursive is almost the same as to make a lowercase Z, simply larger. If you were to draw a line horizontaly through the middle of the line you're writing on, dividing it in half, the Z begins just above that line. The first part of the Z is a large hump which is tilted backwards, so that it comes down at a diagonal, running from the upper right to the lower left down to directly below the starting point on the bottom line. The line then forms a small hump up, to halfway between the middle line and the bottom line, before coming down again to the bottom line. The line continues straight down at a slight angle sloping downward to the left. This line goes below the bottom line, much like the tail of a lowercase denelian Y, except that it loops up and back to the right before crossing over itself just below the bottom line. This line ends just above the bottom line.