Infinite lines as for example the diameter of a circle
uncountable lines can be drawn through one point.
In Euclidian or plane geometry, there can be only one line through two fixed points. Lines cannot actually be drawn; if you see it it is not a geometric line. If the points are on a curved surface as in a geometry that is non-Euclidian, then there can be infinitely many lines connecting two points.
In plane (Euclidian) geometry there is only one line through two points. On a sphere, every meridian intersects the north and south poles.
Infinitely many.
Only one line can be drawn through eight points.
Through any two distinct points, exactly one line can be drawn. For 5 non-collinear points, each pair of points can form a line. The number of ways to choose 2 points from 5 is given by the combination formula ( \binom{5}{2} ), which equals 10. Therefore, 10 lines can be drawn through 5 non-collinear points.
the answer is one
line segments
One.
1 straight line. An infinite number of curved lines.
If you're talking about straight lines (not curves) the answer is one.
Infinite lines because a circle has infinite lines of symmetry.