vanishing point
This is called the "vanishing point".
Lines used in Linear Perspective are, Horizontal Lines, Vertical Lines, and Orthogonal Lines.
What is an orthogonal line?
True
I think its true.....
In linear perspective, the primary lines used are orthogonal lines that converge at a vanishing point on the horizon line. Lines that are not used include vertical lines, which maintain their direction regardless of perspective, and horizontal lines that run parallel to the horizon without converging. Additionally, any lines that do not relate to the spatial arrangement or do not lead towards the vanishing point are also excluded from creating effective linear perspective.
vanishing line is not the right answer (sorry) The Correct Answer is orthogonal lines (JHappy321) Hope It Helped :D
linear perspective
Orthogonal lines are lines that intersect at a right angle, forming an angle of 90 degrees between them. In a Cartesian coordinate system, two lines are orthogonal if the product of their slopes is -1. This concept is often used in geometry, linear algebra, and various applications in physics and engineering. Orthogonality can also extend beyond lines to include vectors and functions in higher-dimensional spaces.
A form of perspective in which parallel lines seem to meet at one or more vanishing points
Orthogonal lines are two lines which are perpendicular, i.e. 90 degrees, to each other.
linear perspective