put sand on the line u want to cover put sand on the line u want to cover
To make a line longer without touching it, you can create the illusion of length by drawing additional lines parallel to the original line, extending outward from its ends. Alternatively, you could simply draw another line that connects to the original line's endpoints, effectively increasing its perceived length.
draw a shorter oblong for the north island and a longer one for the south island. Then put the details and draw a line from the shorter oblong
Gravity is a force that pulls objects towards each other without direct contact, similar to a magnet or vacuum. Electromagnetic force can also attract or pull objects together without physical contact, such as with magnets. In the context of space, black holes have an intense gravitational pull that can draw in nearby objects and light without touching them.
yes
The mom had one child stand on the paper and draw an outline around their feet. Then, the second child stood within the outline drawn by the first child, allowing both children to "stand" on the same piece of paper without physically touching each other.
No idea what a mustace is, but for a simple mustache draw two circles touching each other and add a curvy, creative tail on the outer sides.
To connect 2 rows and 3 dots without touching the line, imagine arranging the dots in a 2x3 grid. You can draw a line that connects the dots by using a zigzag or a looping path that doesn't directly touch the line connecting rows and dots. This way, the connections between the dots are made without a continuous line between them, effectively creating a visual connection without direct contact.
Use a heart-shaped object and try to keep your pencil touching that object.
draw a + inside it, touching the outside of the circle-cut it into Quaters.
Yes. Draw three line segments so that they cross at three points forming a triangle (with each side extending beyond the vertices of the triangle). Draw one circle to enclose the triangle without touching it to intersect the extended sides at a further 6 points, making 9 points of intersection so far. Draw the second circle slightly shifted (relative to the first) so that it also encloses the triangle (without touching it) creating a further 6 intersection points with the three lines and 2 with the first circle; an additional 8 intersection points making 17 in all.
Yes! It can(: you draw the circle in the rectangle with its top and bottom touching the top and bottom sides of the rectangle
you just draw lines