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they both are letters, they can be both typed, and both can be formal. they have a few parts that are simular. and thats alli know. hoped i helped.
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A clothing line is a line of clothes made by a designer e.g. New Look's Generation 915 is a line of clothing because they sell and make different lines of clothing.
The Insertion Loss of a line is the ratio of the power received at the end of the line to the power transmitted into the line.
Callouts are graphic features that you can draw onto your spreadsheet, like a speech bubble or a box with a line or an arrow pointing to a cell. You can then type text into the callout.
The line of symmetry in an arrow is the line connecting to the > part of the arrow.
This question is very difficult to answer because of the ambiguity of what an "arrow" is. An arrow that you might fire from a bow is a three dimensional object and so is not a polygon. An arrow drawn as a straight line with a direction indicator at its head with or without tail feathers (for example <|----<< : oh, the graphics on this browser are so good, aren't they!) is not a polygon because the shaft is a line: a 1-dimensional object. An arrow such as the default one used to represent the cursor in Windows is a concave heptagon.
A line with an arrow at both ends is simply a line.
how many line are in the star spangled banner
A ray has one arrow on the right. A line segment has a dot on both sides. A line has a arrow on both sides.
A line with a point at each end is known as a segment. A line with an arrow on each end, however, is known simply as a line.
clear banner motd ^^^ I believe that command is wrong. It should be "no banner motd", if your using the cisco command line.
a line with an arrow at one end going up is a right angle
No. the arrow end comprises more than one straight line segments.
A line
The last line of the Star-Spangled Banner isn't a question, it's a statement:"And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall waveo'er the land of the free and the home of the brave."The last line of the first verse does end with a question, quite similar to the statement except the first part is "O, say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave".