All meridians of longitude converge (meet) at the north pole and south pole.
Meridians - or lines of longitude.
ok easy its called the north of south poles(def/how: all those latitudes and longitudes of the globe[the lines that go up and down]are all straight but since the earth is round on a globe youl see then to curve and meet at once single point but theres two areas were they meet the north pole and south pole
Parallel lines meet in infinity(they don't meet at all)
All lines of longitude meet at the poles; none pass through. No lines of latitude connect at or pass through either pole.
All lines of longitude meet at the North and South Poles.
Lines of constant latitude are parallel. No two of them meet anywhere.All lines of constant latitude cross all lines of constant longitude.
So that we may all agree on and communicate absolute locations on the surface of the globe.
All the lines of longitude meet or converge at the North Pole - they meet at the South Pole too!
The Lines of Longitude all meet at the Poles.
All meridians of longitude begin and end at the same two points ... the north and south poles. Although they all appear parallel to each other as they cross the equator, I guess it's more comfortable to say that they're not parallel, since they all intersect.
No - perpendicular lines meet at right angles.
Longitudes are lines that run north to south on a globe. At the poles, longitudes converge and meet because all lines of longitude, or meridians, come together at a single point. This means that at the poles, there is no east or west direction left to differentiate between, so the longitudes effectively merge together.