It is a tranversal.
Coplanar lines that do not intersect (have no common point) are parallel.Two objects are coplanar if they both lie in the same plane, they must either intersect or be parallel.
Coplanar lines are 2 or more lines located on the same plane. Ex.: If you draw 2 or more lines on a graph, they are all coplanar (the plane they are all on is the piece of paper you drew the graph on).
...must be coplanar.
transversal
Not necessarily. Points may lie in different planes.
Transversal
A transverse line.
Think of an H one line intersects two others, this is called transversal
transversal
How very interesting. And the question is ... ? Every line will intersect an infinite number of coplanar lines - not just "two or more".
Non-coplanar lines refer to points operating or showing in different planes. None of the points are in the same plane.
A transversal.
A line that intersects two coplanar lines at two different points is called a transversal. This line crosses each of the two lines, creating angles at the points of intersection. The angles formed can be classified as corresponding, alternate interior, or same-side interior, depending on their positions relative to the transversal and the two lines. Transversals are commonly studied in geometry, particularly in the context of parallel lines.
It is a transversal.
A transversal line intersects parallel lines creating various angles.
Points and lines on the same plane are coplanar.
a line that intersects two or more lines on a plane is a