Try wording the question better. i cant understand what you're asking. First of all, you dont write "what are" if your next word is "the". It should be "what is". Secondly, when you write "point" do you mean, pointe?as in Ballet. I guess what im trying to convey is, if you want an answer try asking a question.
collinear points are points on a grid that lie on the same line. Non-collinear points do not sit on the same line.
The pronoun that points out something is a demonstrative pronoun. Examples include "this," "that," "these," and "those."
Examples of points are: The place two perpendicular lines meet The place 2x and 3y meet on an x\y axis The vertex of an angle
Physical
water at 0 degree Celsius
Some examples of isoelectric points in different molecules include glycine (pI of 6.0), histidine (pI of 7.6), and lysine (pI of 9.7). These molecules reach their isoelectric points when they have a net charge of zero.
As examples are wolfram, tantalum, rhenium.
A Demonstrative pronoun points out (or demonstrates) something. Examples of these pronouns are : this, that, these, those
No, boiling points and freezing points are examples of physical properties, not chemical properties. Chemical properties describe how a substance interacts with other substances to form new substances, while physical properties describe characteristics that can be observed without changing the chemical composition of the substance.
Motion movement and changes
Yes. Those lines are examples of when an inequality (≥ or ≤) is graphed.
Boiling point and freezing point are examples of physical properties of a substance, specifically referring to the temperature at which a substance transitions between different states of matter. Boiling point is the temperature at which a substance changes from a liquid to a gas, while freezing point is the temperature at which a substance changes from a liquid to a solid.