The corners of building, trees, sign posts, and best posts.
Some examples for parallel lines- railroad tracks, steps, buildings, paper, windows, ect. Some examples for perpendicular lines- stop sign, bridge, street intersection, driveway into a street, ect.
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The lines on a highway
-- Look around. You'll see a pair of them at every place on the floor of your room where two edges of the floor meet. -- At the same places, you'll also see a vertical line ... where two walls meet ... that's perpendicular to both edges of the floor that meet there. So, just in the room where you're sitting now, there are 12 pairs of perpendicular lines at the 4 corners of the floor. And another 12 pairs at the 4 corners of the ceiling. Is that real enough for you ?
Some examples of perpendicular lines in nature are even ground and the stalks of plants, which often form a perfect right angle. Another example is a waterfall, with the falling water as one line and the body of water at the bottom as the other line, which again form a right angle.
the Horizontal line of you bed to the vertical lines of your bedposts
Some examples for parallel lines- railroad tracks, steps, buildings, paper, windows, ect. Some examples for perpendicular lines- stop sign, bridge, street intersection, driveway into a street, ect.
Yes, but only if they are exactly vertical and exactly horizontal (90 degrees angular difference). For real-world examples, many vertical lines can be perpendicular to a single "horizontal" curved line at the points of intersection.
Did you mean "real world examples of parallel lines"? If so, railroad tracks are a perfect example.
Roads are an example of intersecting lines in the real world.
the lines of the brooklin bridge
this is one example of concurrent line .concurrent line- 3 or more lines that intersect in a certain point .
There are many in life. I'll give some examples. Like, a butterfly. And a boat. Oranges also have two lines of symmetry.
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A real life example of a line is a road. Other examples of lines include ball courts, driveways, roof tops, and buildings.
roads
An "R" with two vertical lines instead of just one