Yes, you do.
They are parallel lines
We'll assume the question refers to Orlando, Florida, in the USA. Orlando's City Hall ... just northwest of the overpass where the East-West Expressway crosses I-4, is at 81.38 degrees west longitude. If you stay at the same latitude as City Hall, and shoot straight east until you get to the Prime Meridian, you arrive at a point in central Algeria, about 48 miles north of Adrar and 600 miles south-southwest of Algiers. That's a trip of 4,945 miles. But traveling straight east isn't the fastest way to get there. By traveling the "great circle" route, you can cut that distance by 115 miles, to only 4,830 miles. But we're not done yet. The Prime Meridian is an imaginary line on the earth that runs all the way between the north and south poles, passing through a particular point in England. That point in Algeria at the same latitude as Orlando is not the spot on the Prime Meridian that's closest to Orlando. The nearest spot happens to be in the far north Atlantic Ocean, very roughly equal distances from Greenland, Iceland, Norway, and Svalbard. That point is only 4,167 miles from Orlando, and it's also on the Prime Meridian.
Parallel Lines-lines that never cross and stay the same distance apart.
no.
no this is myth
If you cross your eyes and somone pokes you in the back close to your butt, you will stay cross-eyed for your life.
Because The lines of Longitude cross over each other at the top of the world which makes them not parallel. Parallel: Lines that never cross or meet And always stay the same distance apart.
If the CPI or Consumer Price Index rises the prime rate will stay the same, but may be adjusted to reflect the state of the economy. An instant rise in the CPI does not equate to an instant rise or decrease in the prime rate. The prime rate is adjusted after several economic factors are reviewed.
When the Philadelphia Phillies are playing in New York, they stay at the Parker Meridian Hotel. It is located in midtown in Manhattan.
No because then it will have more than two factors
Not normally
The first prime number is 2. If you're wondering why 1 is not prime, well, probably because you cannot break a number down if you divide it by 1. When it comes to prime factorization, if you bring 1 into it, the number you start with will stay the same (e.g., If you star a "prime factorization tree" for 100 and start off with 1, you will still have 100. You do not "grow" another "branch.")