Yes , yes it is an example of a parallel line.
As for example perpendicular lines are non parallel lines.
No not always as for example a 3 sided triangle has no parallel sides
parallel?? Parallel is usually used to talk about lines or similar it means they are equal distance apart. For example railway tracks are parallel.
not neccessarily. it can have parallel lines, but it doesn't have to. a kite for example, has no parallel lines, but it is a quad. but it can, such as rhombuses, squares, rectangles, parallelograms, and trapezoids
Yes , yes it is an example of a parallel line.
series
parallel lines
parallel
In software design, parallelism isn't actually very popular. The reason for this unpopularity is that creating correct parallel software is much more complex compared to the creation of a single-threaded straight-forward application design. Parallel software design is often confused with multi-threaded design. This is not the same: multi-threaded design means that an application entertains more than one thread of execution. For example, your favorite text processor can take your input, spell-check and print in the background, etc. These are typically separate threads, executed in parallel (physical hardware permitting) or pseudo-parallel, each designed to do its own thing (receive user input, spell-check, print, etc). The term "parallel design" typically refers to dividing a large, time-consuming, algorithm into smaller, but essentially equal, portions, which can be executed in parallel on different processors or even computers. For example, image processing in an MRI scanner is typically divided into a number of parallel processes, each processing a portion of the data. Other parallel applications include those used for image rendering in the creation of animated movies. To synchronize and monitor these parallized efforts, and to combine the results, is not a trivial task - hence the unpopularity of truly parallel design in software. Multi-threaded design, where each thread of execution solves a different problem, typically requiresless management overhead. For example, the printer thread could be designed as a fire-once component, and -once it has been initialized and started correctly- no further coordination or monitoring might be required. Because a multi-threaded application seemingly performs many tasks in parallel, providing a slick user experience, this concept is widely used in allmost all mainstream applications.
An illusion. Parallel lines, by their nature can never come together.
Pluto is not an example of "nature of science."
mycock
The parallel sides of a polygon are sides that are segments of parallel lines. A polygon need not have any parallel lines. A triangle, for example, is a polygon that cannot have parallel lines.
world designs or nature designs
Because they do not exist naturally in nature.
A kite, for example.