Latitude and longitude are angles, so any common angle measure is appropriate,
such as radians, degrees, grads, etc.
The traditional and most commonly used unit is 'degrees', along with either decimal
fractions of degrees, or else the fiendishly awkward and unwieldy 'minutes' and 'seconds'
fractions of degrees.
Longitude and latitude are measured in terms of degrees, minutes and seconds. Longitude has 360 degrees, while latitude 180 degrees of latitude.
Latitude and longitude are measured in degrees, with latitude representing north-south position and longitude representing east-west position on the Earth's surface.
degrees
degrees
Latitude: East-west Longitude: North-south
latitude is degrees north or south of the equator and Longitude is degrees east or west of Greenwich
Latitude: North or South Longitude: East or West
Latitude and longitude are angles. They're both measured in degrees and fractions of degrees.
Yes they are.
On a graph, 'x' and 'y' are marked and measured in length or distance units. Latitude and longitude are marked and measured in angles.
Latitude is an angle measured north or south from the equator. Longitude is an angle measured east or west from the Prime Meridian
Augusta Georgia is at: Latitude 3.474246, Longitude -82.00967 Mecca is at: Latitude 21.4225, Longitude 39.8261