Well, darling, all one-dimensional and two-dimensional objects lie in a plane. It's like their little playground where they can stretch out and show off their shapes. So next time you see a line or a square strutting its stuff, just remember they're lounging in the fabulous world of a plane.
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All one-dimensional objects lie in a one-dimensional space, which is a line. Two-dimensional objects lie in a two-dimensional space, which is a plane. These spaces are defined by the number of dimensions required to locate a point within them.
They could need three dimensional space. Although points are 1-dimensional objects, it is easy to have four points that need 3-d space: for example the vertices of a tetrahedron (triangular pyramid). Similarly, skew line will need 3-d space.
Yes, it's true
zero-dimensional examples: Endpoints of edges (vertices and corners) Zero-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes. one-dimensional examples: Edges of figures (sides and arcs) One-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes.
A zero-dimensional object cannot move along any dimension, so it (and everything else in this dimension) appears as one incredibly tiny speck. A point is zero-dimensional. A one-dimensional object is a step up from a zero-dimensional one, since objects can move in only in one direction, and objects appear along an impossibly narrow line. These include the line, ray, and segment.
Answer is a skew lines do not lie in the same place
Lines! Yes, they are one-dimensional. Points are zero dimensional, planes are two-dimensional, and prisms and such are three dimensional.