That sounds to us like a very likely "yes" .
Parallel lines would always lie in the same plane. They would need to be skew lines.
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.
parallel lines
Two lines may or may not lie in the same plane, depending on their relationship. If the lines are parallel or intersecting, they exist in the same plane. However, if the lines are skew, meaning they do not intersect and are not parallel, they lie in different planes. Thus, whether two lines lie in the same plane is contingent on their geometric arrangement.
Parallel Lines - Skew lines are lines that do not intersect and do not lie in the same plane. If two lines lie in the same plane they they must either intersect or they are parallel.
Parallel lines would always lie in the same plane. They would need to be skew lines.
parallel lines
parallel lines
Parallel
Parallel Lines - Skew lines are lines that do not intersect and do not lie in the same plane. If two lines lie in the same plane they they must either intersect or they are parallel.
sometimes parallel.
Parallel lines. they never intersect and lie on the same plane.parallel lines
lines which lie in same pane are known as parallel lines or lines which do not intersect are known as parallel lines they extend in both the direction
Parallel
SOMETIMES. I just did that problem in my California geometry book. They can either be parallel or skew...making the answer sometimes.
Two lines are coplanar iff they are parallel OR intersect.
A hexagon has parallel lines.