Yes, it can.
Yes, if no endpoints are defined.
Given a line, there are an infinite number of different planes that it lies in.
-- An infinite number of different planes can intersect the same line. -- The same line can lie in an infinite number of different planes. -- An infinite number of different lines can intersect the same plane.
There's no limit to the number of them. A more cool and sexy way to say the same thing might be: "An infinite number."
Yes, it can.
A line, ray, or line segment contains an infinite number of points.
Yes, if no endpoints are defined.
Given a line, there are an infinite number of different planes that it lies in.
An infinite number. Each point on a line, however small the line is, can have a perpendicular through it. And since there are an infinite number of points on any line, the answer is an infinite number.
infinite number of lines
An infinite number of planes. Picture a line and now picture planes going in every direction through the line,
It does not. It is infinite
infinite
-- An infinite number of different planes can intersect the same line. -- The same line can lie in an infinite number of different planes. -- An infinite number of different lines can intersect the same plane.
There's no limit to the number of them. A more cool and sexy way to say the same thing might be: "An infinite number."
(-4, 3) is a single point. An infinite number of lines, all with different slopes, can contain it.