No. The distance between Rome and Toronto is about 4,400 miles. Latitude and/or longitude change every few inches, and if two places have the same latitude and longitude, then the distance between them is zero.
The center of Rome is located at roughly 41.9° northlatitude, 12.5° east longitude.
The center of Toronto is located at roughly 43.7° northlatitude, 79.4° west longitude.
Toronto is approximately on the same latitude as Siena, Tuscany (43.2° north, 11.2° east) and Cannes, France (43.3° north, 07.0° east), Sochi, Krasnodar, Russia (43.3° north, 39.4° east) and Vladivostok, Primorsky, Russia (43.1° north, 13.1° east).
Once you have a latitude and a longitude, you've got the location pinned downto a single point on the earth's surface. Other places can have the same latitude,and still other places can have the same longitude, but no other point anywhereon the planet can have the same latitude and the same longitude as the first one.
The latitude and longitude of Greenland is 45.27oN 92.34oW.
No two points on Earth ... even the places where your two feet are standing ... can have the same latitude and longitude.
Every place has its own unique latitude and longitude, so other than China, no other place can have the same latitude and longitude as itself.
The same as longitude
Your ISP knows its own latitude and longitude. Your latitude and longitude is assumed to be the same as your ISP.
Ancient Rome is in the same place a modern Rome. The Colosseum is located at 41o 53' 24.98'' N 12o 29' 32.07'' E.
Once you have a latitude and a longitude, you've got the location pinned downto a single point on the earth's surface. Other places can have the same latitude,and still other places can have the same longitude, but no other point anywhereon the planet can have the same latitude and the same longitude as the first one.
Once you name a longitude and latitude, you've nailed down a single point on the Earth's surface, and no other point anywhere on Earth can have the same longitude and latitude.
The latitude and longitude of Greenland is 45.27oN 92.34oW.
Yes. If you want the 'latitude and longitude' of a place, you can simply ask for its 'coordinates'.
Every point on a meridian has the same longitude.
No two points on Earth ... even the places where your two feet are standing ... can have the same latitude and longitude.
Every place has its own unique latitude and longitude, so other than China, no other place can have the same latitude and longitude as itself.
Every point on Earth has a latitude and a longitude. No two points have the same set of two numbers.
The same as longitude
No.