False
false.
This is true. If three straight lines are drawn, they can only intersect at two points. That is, each line will only intersect with another once.
Mostly to keep the letters aligned to a straight horizontal line. However, guide lines can also be drawn to help keeping the stroke width or slant angle constant.
No. That would mean that a place had two different air pressures at once. Not possible.
10. Each additional line can only intersect each of the previous lines once, so for two lines, there can be only 1 intersection, for three there can be up to 3 intersections (1+2), for four there can be up to 6 intersections (3+3), and for five there can be up to 10 (6+4). This trend continues as you increase the number of lines: 6 lines: 15 possible intersections (10+5) 7 lines: 21 possible intersections (15+6) 8 lines: 28 possible intersections (21+7) and so on...
Since the lines that intersect are the equations, if they intersect once they have one solution.
They only cross once because intersecting lines are only supposed to INTERSECT at one point, hence the name intersecting lines
Map orientation means turning the map until features drawn on the map line up with features seen on the land. Compass readings of at least three known points (church steeple, river bridge, road junction, etc,) can help pin-point your position once the lines are drawn on the map - your position on the map is in the small triangle where the three lines meet.
he'd had painted 35 and had drawn 11 none painted once
They open and close their shells, once something is drawn into it they absorbe it.
keep rereading it over and over again and get someone to run the lines with you as much as possible once you think you have them try and memorise them without the use of the script .
those two lines are perpendicular lines