One mile is 5,280 feet. Measure one white line and one space between the lines and add them together. Divide that sum into 5,280 and then divide by 2 and subtract 1. (assuming the length of the lines and spaces are the same.) ex: line = 5ft, space = 5ft. divide 5,280 by 10 = 528 - 1 = 527 white lines. CORRECT ANSWER: Since per the department of transportation regulations, the length of a white line is 20 feet long with a 10 foot space between the white lines, you get one white line every 30 feet, divide 5280 by 30 and you get 176 white lines per mile.
4 lines. Two from the corners and two from the middle of the sides.
6 feet
There are 4 feet.
There are 60 white lines in a mile if the lines are spaced at a standard interval of 80 feet.
One, right down the middle.
1 down the middle
three parts
the British flag has no lines of symmetry it only has a point of symmetry (in the middle of the flag)
A limerick typically consists of five lines of verse. The rhyme scheme is usually AABBA, with lines 1, 2, and 5 containing three metrical feet and lines 3 and 4 containing two metrical feet.
I don't really know but I think there are four
One right down the middle :)