The description given fits that of parallel lines
A given plane and a given line don't necessarily have to intersect at all.If the line is parallel to the plane, then they never do.The line can also be in the plane, and then every point on the line is alsoa point in the plane.The most likely case, though, is that the line is not parallel to the plane andnot in it. In that case, their intersection is a single point.So I guess the best answer from the allowed choices is 'sometimes'.
Parallel lines remain equal distance apart and never intersect each other.
The point where the three medians of the triangle intersect
Printer Paper make the best paper plane.
the point where the three angle bisectors of the triangle intersect
Skew lines can simply be described as two lines that are not coplanar (they are not in the same plane). This means that they do not intersect and are not parallel.
Perpendicular lines are straight lines that intersect each other at right angles which is 90 degrees
a screw
There are many types of lines used in math and some of them are:- Perpendicular line that intersect each other at right angles or 90 degrees Parallel lines that never intersect each other Lines of intersect that form equal opposite angles Transversal line that cuts through parallel lines with special angular properties Solidus line that separates the numerator from the denominator in fractions Line of best fit that is used in data analysis Straight line equations that are plotted on the Cartesian plane Segment lines that have defined end points Number line that has numbers from negative to positive in ascending order
An example of a famous parallelism is "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times."
Parallel lines: they never intersect Transversal lines: they cut through parallel line Line segment: it has 2 endpoints Number line: has negative, zero and postive numbers on it in ascending order Line of best fit: best correlation between 2 variables Dotted line: separates graphical quantities Straight line equation: plotted on the Cartesian plane
A given plane and a given line don't necessarily have to intersect at all.If the line is parallel to the plane, then they never do.The line can also be in the plane, and then every point on the line is alsoa point in the plane.The most likely case, though, is that the line is not parallel to the plane andnot in it. In that case, their intersection is a single point.So I guess the best answer from the allowed choices is 'sometimes'.
A sample of them are as follows:- Parallel lines remain equal distance apart and never intersect Perpendicular lines intersect each other at right angle Diagonal lines are found in polygons with 4 or more sides Transversal line cuts through parallel lines creating various equal angles Line of best fit is used to find the correlation of collected data Straight line equations can be plotted on the Cartesian plane Line graphs are drawn by plotting points and joining them with straight lines Number line has 0 at its centre Solidus line separates the numerator from the denominator in a fraction
Parallel lines remain equal distance apart and never intersect each other.
compassionate
parallel
a regular oval shape, traced by a point moving in a plane so that the sum of its distances from two other points (the foci) is constant, or resulting when a cone is cut by an oblique plane that does not intersect the base.