They are parallel to each other.
since one parallel lines is perpendicular to another line, the other parallel line is perpendicular to the line as well. so the two would not be parallel, only the original two.
There are three lines in the figure described. Two of the lines never meet, these are the parallel lines. The third line crosses the other lines, it is the "transversal" line. If the parallel lines are really line SEGMENTS then each can be bisected (cut into two equal lengths) This is what your description states.
Parallel lines.
If two lines are parallel to the same line, then they are parallel to each other.
It is a transversal line
since one parallel lines is perpendicular to another line, the other parallel line is perpendicular to the line as well. so the two would not be parallel, only the original two.
Yes, two lines that lie in parallel to the same line are always parallel to each other. This is based on the Transitive Property of Parallel Lines, which states that if line A is parallel to line B, and line B is parallel to line C, then line A is parallel to line C. Thus, if two lines are both parallel to a third line, they must be parallel to each other.
Yes.
The third line is known as a transversal.
A transversal.
Two lines that are both perpendicular to a third line are not parallel to each other unless they are the same line. In Euclidean geometry, if two lines are perpendicular to a third line, they will meet at the same angle to that line, creating a right angle. However, they can diverge from each other, resulting in them intersecting at some point rather than being parallel. Thus, they are not necessarily parallel.
Yes. Just because a third line is there, it doesn't mean the two other lines can't be parellel.
There are three lines in the figure described. Two of the lines never meet, these are the parallel lines. The third line crosses the other lines, it is the "transversal" line. If the parallel lines are really line SEGMENTS then each can be bisected (cut into two equal lengths) This is what your description states.
You pass another line through both of them and measure the angles. If the first two lines form the same angle with the third line, the first two are parallel.
It's a third line, parallel to both and midway between them.
Yes. The easiest example is to take two parallel lines and use the third line as a transversal.
two parallel lines are crossed by another line ,that's the perpendicular.