They form angles.
There is no specific name for lines that meet at one point, but lines that meet at a point, the point is called the intersection point.
Two lines that meet at one point is called an intersection. More than two seperae lines can be intersected at one point.
A point where two lines meet is called an intersection. Also, more than two lines can be intersected in one point.
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concurrent
Intersecting lines.Intersecting lines.Intersecting lines.Intersecting lines.
Lines intersect if the meet at one point. Perpendicular lines also meet at one point, but their intersection is a right angle. Intersecting lines in the plane do not meet at two points.
Correct. Two lines never meet in more than one point.
It depends what shape the lines meet in. If they meet in a triangle the point in which the lines meet are called the vertex.In Geometry, this isn't precisely true, since there are no "lines" in a triangle, only line segments.In Euclidean (standard) geometry, two lines can only:(a) meet at a single "point"; OR(b) never meet (they are parallel lines).You could ask "what if they meet at several points?". In that case, there is just one line. A line goes on infinitely far in either direction. And if two lines meet at more than one point, they are congruent at every point, and are therefore both just the same line. It is impossible for two different lines to meet at two or more points in Euclidean geometry.
Intersecting, perpendicular.
intersecting lines, or line segments
Parallel lines are lines that run side by side and never meet. Perpendicular lines are lines that meet in one point, forming four right angles around the point.