a cross
a shape of a cathedral dummy lololol
a cathedral was built to resemble the shape of a cross
It was meant to be pointed to heaven like a prayer.
It doesn't! It takes the shape of whatever container you put it in. At least, it takes the shape of the floor of the container.
How about a square floor tile
laying down sediment and plucking the valley floor.
its the symbol on the floor: a Z shape like this:zbut bigger
The Niger River helped shape the surrounding area in Medieval times because it offered a source of water for the area. People were able to grow crops near the river and had access to fresh water.
Gases will take on the shape of the container it is in. Carbon dioxide, for example, will take on the shape of the container, but if emptied from the container, the carbon dioxide, being heavier than air, will sink to the floor and then spread out across the floor.
Liverpool has two cathedrals - the Anglican cathedral and the Roman Catholic Cathedral. Because of its shape, and because of a large Catholic Irish immigrant population in Liverpool, the Roman Catholic cathedral is affectionately known by the locals as 'Paddy's Wigwam', although its official title is the 'Metropolitan Cathedral of Liverpool'. The mammoth Anglican cathedral is by far the larest cathedral in the UK, and the largest Anglican church worldwide, even though the present cathedral is a fraction of its originally intended size. Neither cathedral is dedicated to a saint solely; The Roman Catholic cathedral is dedicated to Christ the King, and the Anglican Cathderal is dedicated to Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is very apt that the cathedrals are at both ends of the same street - the very appropriately named Hope Street.
They change its size and shape.
The "bullet" shape is called a Gothic arch. It is the evolution of the Romanesque arch which is just a semicircle, and has a number of structural advantages.