Yes, two lines in intersecting planes are never skew. Skew lines are defined as lines that do not intersect and are not parallel, typically found in different planes. Since the two lines are in intersecting planes, they can either intersect or be parallel, but they cannot be skew.
No, they are either parallel, or they intersect
skew lines
One if the two lines meet, none otherwise. But skew lines do not lie in the same plane, by definition.
two planes intersect in one line, or the planes could be parallel. by the way there is no such thing as skew planes...
Skew lines are non-coplanar, which means they are in different planes. Skew lines are in different planes and they do not intersect.
Planes are flat and 2D so they cannot be skew. Hope this helps :]
Two lines in two intersecting planes can be parallel, intersecting, or skew.
sometimes skew
No, they are either parallel, or they intersect
yes
No. Skew lines must be in different planes. Skew lines have no common points (they never cross).
No--skew lines are nonparallel lines that still do not intersect (in three dimensions or higher).
skew lines
skew lines
No. Skew lines are lines in different planes that are parallel.
One if the two lines meet, none otherwise. But skew lines do not lie in the same plane, by definition.