No lines one and three are not the same, but lines one and five are
ex:
snow
soft, flufy
white and pure
exictement, mabe no school!
snow
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No lines one and three are not the same, but lines one and five are
ex:
snow
soft, fluffy
white and pure
excitement, maybe no school!
snow
It's possible, but for any three lines in the same plane, there could be ether one point of intersection (unlikely) or three (more probably).
All lines are not the same length in a limerick poem. To be a limerick, the first, second, and fifth lines have three metrical feet and lines three and four have two metrical feet. Also, the endings of lines one, two, and five rhyme, and the endings of lines three and four rhyme.
yes, if it happened that they all intersected at the same point. otherwise,three lines, assuming they are non-parallel or they do not coincide, would have at most two intersection points (one for each other line)
All the lines meet at one point: a single solution. All the lines are the same: infinitely many solutions. At least one of the lines does not pass through the point of intersection of the others: no solution.
yes