Dickinson's omission of these words may be figurative language referring to the deaths of several important people in her life
They are perpendicular lines. A fancier word for that is "orthogonal"
parallel
There is no such word. A hexagon is a closed plane shape bounded by six straight lines.
Perpendicular is the word I think you are looking for
Any where on the horizon sorry no dude, vanishing point actually source(s): My school
Dickinson's omission of these words may be figurative language referring to the deaths of several important people in her life.
He dropped the ball.
it is the designer of a painting or something along those lines!
Susannah Dickinson
personal
shurott is not a Hebrew word, but it looks like:Shurot (שורות) = rows, lines, series
Don M. Dickinson has written: 'A word to Canadians' -- subject(s): Commerce, Reciprocity (Commerce)
when you do a drawing using only lines
The operative word was dropped in the sentence, fragmenting it severely. I just dropped in to say hello. Dick dropped Jane's ball.
Vertices is the plural of the word vertex. A vertex is a corner where lines meet.
it means like advertised or solicited or something along those lines
The Emily Dickinson poem "A Route of Evanescence" contains the word "brooch." The specific line is "That when the fine initiated / Come, in a bright brooch to dwell," which refers to a hummingbird.