I can think of only 2; GMT and the International Date Line.
5 or 6 lines of longitude
Latitude: N 36° 8' 15.8676" | Longitude: W 5° 20' 43.3464"
51, 32 N, 0, 5 W
Lines of latitude are called parallels which run east-west as circles parallel to the equator. There are 5 named lines of latitude called the Arctic Circle, Tropic of Cancer, Equator, Tropic of Capricorn, and Antarctic Circle from North to South, respectively.On the other hand, lines of longitude are called meridians.
Latitude lines at 5% intervals of India would be drawn at approximately 8.4°N, 16.8°N, 25.2°N, 33.6°N, 42°N, and 50.4°N. Longitude lines can be represented at 5% increments too, as the value is not based solely on latitude.
Latitude: 34° 5' 0" S Longitude: 18° 51' 0" E
5 longitude
Any meridian of longitude between about 53.66 and 73.55 degrees west passes through Argentina. There are an infinite number of possibilities in that range.
The degree of longitude equivalent to east of 5 degrees west longitude is 355 degrees. This is because there are 360 degrees in a full circle, so moving 5 degrees east from 5 degrees west would place you at 355 degrees longitude.
87.72° west (my house) 118.39° west 118.34° west 34.84° east (my children's residences) 77.56° west (my sister's residence)
Take for example: 75°57′8″W, a line of longitude. We all know that lines of longitude measure the time zones. There are 360 degrees of longitude, and there are 24 hours in a day. Therefore, an hour would be 15 degrees longitude (360/24). 75° would be the number of degrees of longitude. If we take 75 and divide it by 15, we get the number of hours that we want, in this case, 5 hours. 57′ would be the number of minutes. 8″ would be the number of seconds. Sometimes, there are even milliseconds. They are the decimals after the number of
"lines" going north and south on the equator = latitude longtitude- lines going east and west on the equator