That depends on how you hold your map or mount your globe.
The longitude of any place is the angle east or west between that place
and the Prime Meridian.
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Another opinion:
The second answer is wrong enough to confuse people. Longitude is an angle.
Longitude is not lines, any more than lengths are the marks on a ruler.
The lines on a map or globe that go vertically and match with the lines of latitude to tell the exact pin points of a place.
The imaginary lines running from north to south on a map are called longitude.
If you have a map or globe with some longitude lines printed on it, you'll find that they stay where they are and do not move from day to day. Regardless of how many there may be on your particular map or globe, each of them has the same length ... about 12,500 miles ... and joins the north and south poles.
The north-south lines on a map that show distance from the prime meridian are called lines of longitude or meridians. They help determine a location's east-west position on the Earth's surface. The prime meridian itself is designated as 0 degrees longitude, and lines to the east and west are measured in degrees up to 180.
Longitude lines are farthest apart at the equator, where the distance between them is about 69 miles (111 kilometers). As you move towards the poles, the longitude lines converge until they meet at the poles.
On a map, longitude lines go up and down, AKA vertically. Latitude lines are horizontal lines on a map.
Longitude lines go up and down on a map.
Lines that run up and down on a map are called "longitude lines" or "meridians." These lines help indicate the east-west position or direction of a location on the Earth's surface.
The lines on a map or globe that go vertically and match with the lines of latitude to tell the exact pin points of a place.
the lines on the globe are called longitude and latitude lines the longitude lines go up and down while the latitude lines go left to right
That depends on how you hold your map or mount your globe. The longitude of any place is the angle east or west between that place and the Prime Meridian. A line of constant longitude connects the north and south poles.
Lines of latitude are used on a map or globe. They are the lines that run horizontally or left to right, while longitude lines run vertically or up and down.
The imaginary lines running from north to south on a map are called longitude.
If you have a map or globe with some longitude lines printed on it, you'll find that they stay where they are and do not move from day to day. Regardless of how many there may be on your particular map or globe, each of them has the same length ... about 12,500 miles ... and joins the north and south poles.
The north-south lines on a map that show distance from the prime meridian are called lines of longitude or meridians. They help determine a location's east-west position on the Earth's surface. The prime meridian itself is designated as 0 degrees longitude, and lines to the east and west are measured in degrees up to 180.
Latitude lines go -------- (across) And Longitude goes | | | (up & down)
Parallels are lines that go up and down the map, latitudes are lines that go across the map from side to side.