Yes, but it will not be a straight line.
Radii are always positive. No, it is not possible to draw a circle with negative radius.
I'd prefer to draw it with a pencil.
it is possible to draw a square that is a rectangle?
With a pencil and paper
Square meters is a way of expressing area. Say you draw a box on a paper that is 1cm in length and 1cm width, that is a 1 square cm box. It's not the lines you've drawn, it's thye space within. A square meter is the same thing except the length is a meter
A sheet is just a simple piece of paper you can draw on while a drawing is a picture that someone has drawn and is on paper.
Ditto stenciling consists of a carbon sheet of paper facing a sheet of slick paper. It is used to draw the reverse image of the master.
The frisbee needs to generate lift on the exterior edge of the surface (like an aircarft wing). A sheet of paper is not a frisbee, but a sheet of paper with the shape of a wing all the way around it would be.
Get a pencil an eracer and a blank sheet of paper draw something amazing then ur an artist
No, you can't have two lines that are both parallel and perpendicular.
A scale diagram is useful because it alows you to draw very big things in a small sheet of paper, or a blueprint of a house in a sheet of paper unde three feet, no the problem with them is that the scaling, specially if you have to draw a whole block in a letter size sheet of paper makes you lose precision (for example) the width of the line of a pencil could be too wide and cause errors.
To draw a Christmas picture, all one will need is a white sheet of paper, colored pencils, and, if you like, glitter and glue sticks.
Any pattern that you can draw on a sheet of paper (hence 2-D). So shape tessellations etc...
17x Imagine that you draw 18 different 'x's on a sheet of paper, and then rub one out. You will have 17 'x's left.
george cannot move the planets around the sun
Think of a plane as being a sheet of paper that goes on forever in all four directions. Coplanar means that they are on the same plane. Think of how you would draw two lines (which go on forever in two directions) on that sheet of paper so that they would never meet each other (not have a point in common)--you would draw two parallel lines.
Yes, and I'll tell you how to draw a map of it. On a sheet of paper, draw a rectangle 10 cm by 20 cm. Each centimetre represents one kilometre, so your map has a scale of 1:100,000.