line segments
If you're talking about straight lines (not curves) the answer is one.
An infinite number of lines can be drawn through a single point, but only one through two points (of course, if the points don't have the same coordinates).
There is only one possible line that can can through two different points, presuming there are no overlaps.
There are 91 lines.
line segments
One.
In Euclidian or plane geometry, there can be only one line through two fixed points. Lines cannot actually be drawn; if you see it it is not a geometric line. If the points are on a curved surface as in a geometry that is non-Euclidian, then there can be infinitely many lines connecting two points.
uncountable lines can be drawn through one point.
1 straight line. An infinite number of curved lines.
If you're talking about straight lines (not curves) the answer is one.
An infinite number of lines can be drawn through a single point, but only one through two points (of course, if the points don't have the same coordinates).
There is only one possible line that can can through two different points, presuming there are no overlaps.
There is only one possible line that can can through two different points, presuming there are no overlaps.
There are 91 lines.
A line consists of infinitely many points which all satisfy some condition. In that respect, one point or even a trillion points do not make a line. There are infinitely many lines that can be drawn through one point.
i think just one line, as its defenition of straight line