North and south.
North-South
Yes.
north-south
Yes. Longitude lines on a map are vertical and latitude lines are horizontal. But it could be the other way around too. It depends on how you hold your map.
Longitude is an angle that's involved in a description of a location on Earth. It stays right where it's at and doesn't run, any more than the address of your house runs anywhere. If you pick one longitude and then find all the points on Earth that have that longitude, they form a line that joins the north and south poles.
Lines of Longitude are imaginary lines that run from the North Pole to the South Pole. The main line of longitude, the Prime Meridian (zero longitude), passes through the Greenwich Observatory, London, England.
North and South
The lines of longitude are the imaginary lines on a globe that go vertically. Just remember: LONGitude and latitude=fatitude. It's an old way to remember, but it helped me! By the way, the middle line of longitude is called the Prime Meridian, and the middle line of latitude is the equator.
It is along 180 degrees longitude, but it doesn't run in a straight line.
the direction that longitude run is 0 the 180 degrees and also east and west
Lines of longitude stay right there where they are at. Each of them connects the north and south poles.
north and south direction (up and down)