it depends on how long or how many joining segments it has. normally one line segment contains only one midpoint. Unless it has a joining segment there is only one midpoint.
All bisectors intersect the line segment at the midpoint. There can be multiple bisectors, intersecting at the midpoint at different angles, but they all intersect the line segment at its midpoint. The midpoint separates the line segment into two equal halves.
Every line that's exactly on the AB line.
DE and ED are collinear. Infinitely many planed contain the line.
An ellipse has two lines of mirror symmetry: the line that includes the two foci of the ellipse and the perpendicular bisector of the segment of that line between the two foci.
5 line segments
infinitely many * * * * * No. There can be only one midpoint.
Normally just the the one which is in the middle of the line segment
One.
7Type your answer here...
A line, ray, or line segment contains an infinite number of points.
A line segment has one dimension . . . length.
Any line segment has infinitely many points and each one of them is specific to that line segment.
Probably three:The point is not on the segment nor the corresponding line,The point is in the line segment,The point is not in the line segment as given but would be if the segment were extended.
A line segment has two end points.
Yes, you can, and there are infinitely many ways of doing so. 1) Connect the midpoints 2) Notice the parallelogram shape 3) Double the length of one of the sides, and draw it parallel to that side 4) Match the ends of that line to the midpoints. 5) Voila! A quadrilateral with the 4 points as midpoints.
a musical line segment is a segment (paragraph) that you use to read put it also is music in many other forms
Every line and every line segment of >0 length has an inifinite amount of unique points.Socratic Explaination:consider ...- There are 2 distinct points defining a line segment.- Between these 2 distinct points, there is a midpoint.- The midpoint divides the original segment into 2 segments of equal length.- There are 2 distinct points used to define each segment.- Between these 2 distinct points, there is a midpoint for each segment.- These midpoints divide the segments into smaller segments of equal length.- repeat until throughly beatenThis leads to a description of an infinite amount of points for any given line segment.This does not describe all the points of a line segment. Example: the points 1/3 of the distance from either of the the original 2 points are approached but never hit.Please, feel free to rephrase this explanation. I know it's sloppy.