Draw an arrow shooting through a flat piece of paper.
draw two intersecting lines that are not perpendicular
That's the only kind of parallel lines there are, non-intersecting!
Draw two lines that meet somewhere
that is impossible. if they aren't parrallel, and they're rays they have to intersect at some point. This is because rays spread at both ends. The above answer is only correct if the rays on drawn on the same plane or if they are drawn on convergent (intersecting) planes, so the correct answer is the two rays must be drawn on separate planes that are not convergent, since all non-parallel lines on the same plane, or on convergent planes, will eventually intersect. If they are drawn in 3 dimensions than you can avoid them intersecting. Perhaps the questions is not specific enough?
If the planes are non-intersecting, then they're parallel. Any line that intersects one of them intersects both of them.
Draw an arrow shooting through a flat piece of paper.
draw two intersecting lines that are not perpendicular
You draw a plane and with a arrow pointing at the top labeled lift and a arrow pointing to the left labeled thrust and the right with another arrow pointing that way label it Drag and last the arrow pointing down with it labeled Gravity or Weight. All the arrows should be the same size.
a pair of intersecting lines that are perpendicular
That's the only kind of parallel lines there are, non-intersecting!
Draw
sketch
I will sketch.
Draw two lines that meet somewhere
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sketch