In Euclidian geometry it's a point. In non-Euclidean geometry all bets are off.
If no pair of lines is parallel and if each pairwise intersection is distinct, there will be 10 points of intersection.
If no pair of lines is parallel and if each pairwise intersection is distinct, there will be 6 points of intersection.
Parallel lines in Euclidean space are always coplanar.
a point
Parallel lines will be co-planar.
are two lines that are not parallel, coplanar, and do not intersect
If no pair of lines is parallel and if each pairwise intersection is distinct, there will be 499500 points of intersection.
If no pair of lines is parallel and if each pairwise intersection is distinct, there will be 10 points of intersection.
If no pair of lines is parallel and if each pairwise intersection is distinct, there will be 6 points of intersection.
Parallel lines in Euclidean space are always coplanar.
If they are coplanar in a Euclidean space, then yes. If they are not coplanar or not in Euclidean space, then not necessarily.
a point
Coplanar lines that do not intersect are called parallel lines.
If all three lines are parallel, there are zero points of intersection. If all three lines go through a point, there is one point of intersection. If two lines are parallel and the third one crosses them, there are two. If the three lines make a triangle, there are three points.
parallel lines
Parallel lines will be co-planar.
No, not always. Skew lines are never coplanar, but parallel lines are.