In navigation, the direction of travel is determined by the angle made with the direction North (the bearing), measured in the clockwise direction. For this purpose it is assumed that longitudes are parallel on the sacle of the journeys.
Real life example of parallel lines are railroad tracks and rows in a garden. Also the lines on a basketball court are parallel
To solve real-life problems involving angle relationships in parallel lines and triangles, first, identify the parallel lines and any transversal lines that create corresponding, alternate interior, or interior angles. Use the properties of these angles, such as the fact that corresponding angles are equal and alternate interior angles are equal. For triangles, apply the triangle sum theorem, which states that the sum of the interior angles is always 180 degrees. By setting up equations based on these relationships, you can solve for unknown angles and apply this information to the specific context of your problem.
How about when climbing a ladder because its rungs and hand rails are parallel or perhaps when taking a train ride because a train runs on parallel lines.
Most houses are built with walls parallel to each other.
parallel lines are everywhere. They are on the desk you are at, the windows, the very monitor you are looking at. Any two lines that run next to each other are parallel, and without this, very few things would be straight.
Railway lines with sleepers? Lines of latitude crossed by a line of longitude?
The lines on a highway
As a passenger on a train or when climbing a ladder.
the concept of lines and angles r used in our daily life. straight lines are in class rooms on the floor, door,window,zebra crossing on road side. where as angles are used in building constructions,inter connected with subjects like physics chemistry etc.types of angles are used in yoga position , games fields and so on
They are found on the transversal line that cuts through parrallel lines
Brian McSweeney
Parallel lines. Can be found in rectangles, parallelogram, regular polygon with even sides like square(opposite sides are parallel. Real life examples include door (unless you have a triangle door), fish tank (unless you keep goldfish or have one with weird shapes), mobile phones (most do have two parallel lines).