No. Since a line is infinite, it has no mid-point. A bisector must go through a midpoint so nothing can bisect a line (not even a segment).
Bisect a segment is to divide the line segment into 2
Yes or 'True' ~
Sure. There's even a special name for that line. It's called the "perpendicular bisector" of the segment.
The symbol for bisect is typically represented by a line segment with a point in the middle, indicating that it divides the segment into two equal parts. In mathematical notation, the term "bisect" may also be denoted using the symbol "∠" for angles, or simply by stating that a segment or angle is bisected. For example, if line segment AB is bisected at point C, it can be expressed as AC = CB.
No
Bisect a segment is to divide the line segment into 2
Yes or 'True' ~
To bisect anything is to cut it in half. So if one line segment bisects another line segment, then the second segment is divided into two equal lengths.
Basically the definition of bisect is to separate two parts of a line segment to create two congruent line segments, which leads to them being equal.
Yes, it is.
No
Sure. There's even a special name for that line. It's called the "perpendicular bisector" of the segment.
No
Measure it or bisect it with a compass
If your question was: Does a midpoint bisect a segment? Then yes it does... It divides it in half.
well bisector means the line and blahhh blah blahhh idk!
To find its mid point. Which then raises the question why find its midpoint and I cannot answer that.