Its the vertex. I think. Im pretty sure.
vertex
nonparallel lines
vertex
2 Lines in the same plane that do not meet are parallel. If 2 lines are in different planes and do not meet, then they are called skew lines.
draw a square within the circle then draw a straight line between the two sets of opposite corners and where those lines cross is where the center of the circle is. pick ne 3 points on the perimenter of the circle..... join the 1st point to the 2nd wit a straight line & the 2nd point to the 3rd.... bisect these 2 lines with a compass or simply find the midpoint of the lines.... if u hav bisected the lines draw a strange line thru the 2 points where the arcs cross and where the 2 lines meet is the centre point.... if u got the midpoints of the 2 lines just draw a pendicular line from the midpoint of both lines & again the centre is where the 2 lines meet.... (both methods are the same realie only 4 the fact that bisecting is more accurate!!!)
When 2 or more straight lines meet...the point where they meet is called the point of intersection
vertex
nonparallel lines
It is the Intersection of 2 or more lines. Such as in the letter V, the vertex is the point at the bottom when the 2 lines meet.
vertex
An intersection.
Point of intersection is where the point where 2 lines or a line and a plane meet, or in a 3-dimensional space three planes meet, or any other graphs that intersect in a point.Point of concurrency is the intersection point of concurrent lines.In geometry, two or more lines are said to be concurrent if they all pass through a single point.For example, the perpendiculars bisectors of the sides of a triangle are concurrent and they meet at the point of concurrency.So point of intersection may be the same as point of concurrency, but when it comes to examples other than lines, point of intersection is often used. When it comes to just lines, either one is ok.
Intersection point in lines & in figures' sides it's called vertex.
2 Lines in the same plane that do not meet are parallel. If 2 lines are in different planes and do not meet, then they are called skew lines.
That's the "vertex" of the angle.
draw a square within the circle then draw a straight line between the two sets of opposite corners and where those lines cross is where the center of the circle is. pick ne 3 points on the perimenter of the circle..... join the 1st point to the 2nd wit a straight line & the 2nd point to the 3rd.... bisect these 2 lines with a compass or simply find the midpoint of the lines.... if u hav bisected the lines draw a strange line thru the 2 points where the arcs cross and where the 2 lines meet is the centre point.... if u got the midpoints of the 2 lines just draw a pendicular line from the midpoint of both lines & again the centre is where the 2 lines meet.... (both methods are the same realie only 4 the fact that bisecting is more accurate!!!)
The vertex is the point at which two rays of an angle or two edges of a polygon meet. The plural of vertex is vertices.A point where two lines or line segments meet or intersect. A triangle has three vertices.1. The point at which the sides of an angle intersect.2. The point of a triangle, cone, or pyramid that is opposite to and farthest away from its base.3. A point of a polyhedron at which three or more of the edges intersect.The vertex of an http://www.answers.com/topic/angle is the point where two rays begin or meet, where two line segments join or meet, where two lines intersect (cross), or any appropriate combination of rays, segments and lines that result in two straight "sides" meeting at one place.In geometry and trigonometry, an angle (in full, plane angle) is the figure formed by two rays sharing a common endpoint, called the vertex or vertex of the angle (vertices in plural). With solid figures, like pyramids or polyhedrons, a vertex is a corner where three or more of the faces meet.Remember,* faces are the flat sides.* Edges are the lines where two of the faces meet.* Vertices are the corners where three or more of the faces meet.a vertex is the point where two or more lines meet