intersecting lines divergent lines convergent lines
There is no kind of shape that has a straight line or curved line a kind of element of the following question is "space"...hope this helps
Yes. A quadrilateral is any plane figure bounded by four straight lines. A parallelogram has both pairs of opposite sides parallel and is therefore a special kind of quadrilateral.
Perpendicular lines form right angles at their intersections.
They are alike because they both cross each other. They are different because perpendicular lines have to be a right angle while intersecting lines can be any kind of angle.
If the "contour interval" ... the elevation difference between lines ... is the same everywhere on the map, then the lines will be closer rogether on steep ground, and farther apart on flatter ground.
Contour lines that are far apart indicate a gentle slope. Because contour lines connect points with the same elevation, wide spacing indicates that the elevation is not changing drastically.
An angle has no distance and so there is no angle which is the same distance apart.
They're not different. Perpendicular lines are one kind of intersecting lines. Except that perpandicular lines always interset at 90 degrees.
If the slopes of two lines are unequal, they will cross somewhere, so the distance between them depends on x, and isn't really defined.If the slopes are equal, they are parallel, so they don't cross. So two lines are far apart if they have the same slope and a large difference in their x or y intercepts.
A staff. Not the wooden kind, but the kind with five lines that almost always requires a clef sign.
Lines that are very close indicate a steep change in altitude. Far apart means a slow or gradual change.
inactive
hardwood or vinyl . tile on a raised foundation will always crack in the grout lines
intersecting lines divergent lines convergent lines
Parallel lines
Straight lines.