lines
Parallel lines.
Yes, they are.
Skew. If they are in the same plane they are called parallel.
A square is two-dimensional and occupies one plane. A cube is three-dimensional and contains 6 planes, and 3 pairs of parallel sides.
Typically this is represented by a line or a plane, both of which are infinite. (When laymen refer to "lines" and "planes" they are referring to actual line segments and partial planes which have endpoints/end-ranges.)
Lines
A plane midway between the two given planes and parallel to them.
Parallel lines.
Yes, they are.
if there are two planes, and they are parallel, then i would assume that their lines are parallel too. so yeh yeh a line in one plane is parallel to a line in the other plane...since they are parallel(:ha * * * * * No. Consider yourself in a cuboid room. The wall in front of you and the wall behind you are parallel planes. There is a line on the wall behind you that goes vertically, from the floor to the ceiling. There is a line on the wall in front of you that goes horizontally from left to right. These two lines are on parallel planes, but the lines are NOT parallel. So, (: ha to the person who answered the question previously!
Two lines of a plane are said to be parallel if they do not intersect and the perpendicular distance betweem them is always same.
It is any plane parallel to the sagittal plane.
no, if they are both in the same plane and IF EXTENDED INDEFINITELY would never intersect at any point then the segments are considered parallel.
That's a fair statement.
Yes. Adjacent sides in a cube are perpendicular and planes that are perpendicular to the same plane are parallel.
No.When they are on different planes and they do not cross, they are called skew lines, they are not considered parallel. When they ARE parallel, it means that they do not cross and they both lie on ONE plane
Skew lines, which live in parallel planes.