Yes because latitude goes from west to east, while longitude goes from north to south.
Yes. The "circles" of latitude that run east-west around the earth decrease in length the closer you get to the poles.
Because the parallels of latitude are imaginary lines drawn on the Earth's surface, and, you may have noticed, cross sections of the Earth itself decrease in diameter as the cutting plane moves toward the poles.
Lines of latitude are shorter as you approach the poles. Imagine a spherical loaf of bread cut into slices. For each slice, the crust is like a line of latitude.
longitude
Not quite. Lines of latitude are called parallels, and they never touch each other. The meridians are lines of longitude, and all of them converge at the poles.
At the North and South Poles of the Earth.
Because the parallels of latitude are imaginary lines drawn on the Earth's surface, and, you may have noticed, cross sections of the Earth itself decrease in diameter as the cutting plane moves toward the poles.
Lines of latitude are horizontal and run parallel to the poles
Lines of latitude are shorter as you approach the poles. Imagine a spherical loaf of bread cut into slices. For each slice, the crust is like a line of latitude.
longitude
Latitude lines
Not quite. Lines of latitude are called parallels, and they never touch each other. The meridians are lines of longitude, and all of them converge at the poles.
longitude and latitude
No they do not
At the North and South Poles of the Earth.
Lines of Latitude, i think:)
All lines of latitude are parallel to the Equator, except the poles ,which are dot/points.
The lines that run north and south "or long ways" are longitude lines. East and west are latitude lines.