1/4"
We can only draw when we are combining several objects of three dimensions to four only by changing by very small values and it's only how many lines we will be drawing and where we will be drawing a line, we cannot be drawing other lines and it will only be speaking about what it leads to
Yes because you could stretch the rubber band long and it will go far but if you stretch short it will not go as far. the materials you need is rubber bands a tape measure or meter stick paper pencil
The one that Harry Potter had is not real. It doesn't exist. But human can draw just like real and look invisible from far away or something.
Is magnitude in a straight line
depends on the hardness and how its used - i have a HB with a thin hard lead that i have been using for laying out drawings that has been in use about 2 years now - and then i use solid 3/8 inch thick graphite 9B pencils that go in about a week I just tested it with my 6th grade class. We drew a line for 1/8 of a mile and it used 1/8 of the pencil lead. This reasoning means that we would use 1 inch of a pencil for 1 mile. Thus, the average 7inch pencil can draw 7 miles of a line. This does not take into account any variables such as the thickness of the lead, the pressure of the writer on the pencil, and the imperfect line that was drawn. However, I think it is safe to say that the 35 miles myth seems a bit far-stretched.
Because you skin is far too soft, a pencil lead needs a rougher surface to leave a mark.
I wouldn't suggest just letting your dog chew on a pencil, but I don't think it will kill them. My dog has chewed on several pencils (without me knowing until finding the evidence) and so far nothing has happened to her. She was still the same as far as hyper activity and she didn't vomit or have diarrhea. But, with that, all dogs are different just as people are different and one dog might react to something differently than another.
1). Make a pencil mark at the point (6, 9).2). Make another pencil mark at either the point (9, 11) or the point (3, 7), whichever is more convenient.3). Place the straight side of your calculator in line with both points, and use it to guide your pencilas you draw the straight line through them. Extend the line as far as you like in each direction.
What do you mean? You can always draw a line from Earth to Venus. Or between any two points.
Technically anything in great enough proportions is poisonous. However pencil "lead" isn't lead, but is actually graphite. Graphite is far less toxic than lead if consumed.
Actually, the "lead" of a pencil is not lead at all. It is actually graphite. If it were lead, you would get very sick and die from lead poisoning...and as tasty as that pencil tip may look, it probably wont taste good and you really shouldn't eat it. Nonetheless, the graphite probably wont hurt too bad even if you decide to eat it.
-- Mark a tiny pencil dot on the x-axis at x=8. -- Place your ruler on the paper, so that its edge is vertical (up-and-down), and move it around until the edge passes through the tiny dot. -- Using your pencil, draw a line segment along the edge of the ruler, through the tiny dot and as far in each direction ... up and down ... as you like, without going off of the paper. The line segment you drew is a part of the graph of the equation [ x = 8 ]. It's not possible to draw the complete graph. It's just more of the same line, but the line "goes to infinity" and it can never stop.
Not as far as I know. You would have to find a very old pencil. These days a pencil's inner core is mostly made of a form of carbon usually known as graphite. Suke girl.
a line of best fit, on a graph you draw the line where it is closest to most points and measure how far it is away from the line. http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/maths/images/graph_53.gif
You could try drawing a vertical line as far from the points as you can get - though why you would want to do that defeats me.
is the root sysytem to a pencil pine destructive