longitude
No, lines of latitude do not intersect.
Lines of Longitude meet/intersect at the North & South Poles ONLY.
Every meridian of longitude is perpendicular to every parallel of latitude, and every parallel of latitude is perpendicular to every meridian of longitude.
All lines of longitude are equal. The longest line of latitude is the Equator.
40n, 89w
longitude
They intersect, yes.
You find the lines of latitude and longitude and find the place that they intersect, which is your location.
The two tropics are lines of latitude at 23°26′13.0″ North and South of the Equator and they intersect all lines of longitude.
Every line of longitude intersects with every line of latitude and vic-versa.
No. All of them do but two. The latitude lines at 90 degrees North and South actually coincide with the intersection of all longitudinal lines. So technically, because they coincide, they do not form any angle.
No, lines of latitude do not intersect.
Every line of constant latitude intersects every possible longitude, and vice-versa.
When lines of longitude and latitude intersect, they form a grid system that allows for the precise location of any point on Earth. This system helps in navigation and mapping, with latitude lines running east-west and longitude lines running north-south. The intersection of these lines creates coordinates that can pinpoint any location on the globe.
So as to create a particular location on the grid where they intersect.
We're not sure what the question is getting at. Every meridian of constant longitude intersects every parallel of constant latitude, and vice versa.