Take any one point on the figure. Draw a line from it to the origin. At the origin measure an angle of 90 degrees (right angle) in a clockwise direction. Draw a line from the origin at this new angle and of the same length as the original angle. Repeat this process for the other points in the figure. NB Be careful, there will be numerous lines from the origin.
At the end points of the new lines, connect up to reveal the origin figure ,but rotated 90 degrees - clockwise.
Ask your math teacher
Venus and Uranus are the only planets that do not rotate counter-clockwise.
ALL Stihl straight shaft trimmers rotate counter clockwise. ALL Stihl curved shaft trimmers rotate clockwise. This info is found on the Stihl FAQ page.
In most cases, tornadoes in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while those in the southern hemisphere rotate clockwise. A few tornadoes, accounting for about 1 tornado in every thousand, will rotate in the "wrong" direction. These are called anticyclonic tornadoes.
In the Northern Hemisphere, when facing North, towards the Pole Star (Polaris) Ursa Major and surrounding constellations, rotate counter-clockwise (right to left).Turn round to face south (with Polaris behind you) the stars rotate clockwise (left to right).
In the northern hemisphere, yes, with the exception of the rare anticyclonic tornado But in the southern hemisphere tornadoes almost always rotate clockwise.
You dont, its just 90 degrees 3 times..
Move it 3 times* * * * *or once in the anti-clockwise direction.
To rotate a figure 180 degrees clockwise about the origin you need to take all of the coordinates of the figure and change the sign of the x-coordinates to the opposite sign(positive to negative or negative to positive). You then do the same with the y-coordinates and plot the resulting coordinates to get your rotated figure.
No, only their positions will change.
multiply the coordinates by -1.
rotate it 90 degrees
360 degree rotation (clockwise or anticlockwise) leaves any figure in exactly the same position as it was at the start. So YOU DO NOTHING.
I dont really know if this is right but i think to do this problem you have to take a point then rotate the paper counter clockwise around the origin then you have a new point which is called a prime. Then reflect it over the y axis on the graph.
Visualize a capital "N." Rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise (a quarter turn to the left) it would look like a capital "Z."
The x,y origin is 0,0
The same as 180 degrees clockwise. What do you mean "the answer to"?
Switch the x and y coordinates and multiply the first first coordinate (the new x coordinate) by -1