All bisectors intersect the line segment at the midpoint. There can be multiple bisectors, intersecting at the midpoint at different angles, but they all intersect the line segment at its midpoint. The midpoint separates the line segment into two equal halves.
Only one.
Explain why a line segment can have one midpoint but many bisectors
Since there is no such word as "perpindicuar", it is difficult to be sure. A line segment can have only one perpendicular bisector.
Exactly one. No more, no less.
no-- It only has one. Since it is a segment, it has a definite start and end, so it has only one middle (the bisector).
Infinitely many. Each line segment contains one point which bisects it. Any one of the infinite lines through that point, apart from the original line, is a bisector.
A line that is perpendicular to the segment of a plane and passes through the midpoint.
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One ! The word 'bisect' means to cut in two !
A bisector is a line (or line segment) which passes through the midpoint. You can have multiple lines intersect at this one point, and all of them will bisect the original line segment, since they pass through its midpoint. A perpendicular bisector passes through the midpoint, and also is perpendicular to the original line segment, so there will be only one of those.
one