Some examples include the structural frames of buildings, railroad tracks, windows (opposite sides), sailboats, steps, and paper.
parallel bars in men's gymnastics
Also anything that is shaped as a rhombus, square or a rectangle. ( added by a.m.b.)
Real life example of parallel lines are railroad tracks and rows in a garden. Also the lines on a basketball court are parallel
Roads are an example of intersecting lines in the real world.
lines on a notebook, grids on graphing paper, and the hands of a clock
the lines of the brooklin bridge
-- a railroad track -- the sides of a ladder -- the rungs (steps) of a ladder -- the two curbs on the street
Did you mean "real world examples of parallel lines"? If so, railroad tracks are a perfect example.
Real life example of parallel lines are railroad tracks and rows in a garden. Also the lines on a basketball court are parallel
Transversal lines cut through or touch parallel lines as for example support sleepers on a rail track or transversal supports on a gate
Roads are an example of intersecting lines in the real world.
Some examples for parallel lines- railroad tracks, steps, buildings, paper, windows, ect. Some examples for perpendicular lines- stop sign, bridge, street intersection, driveway into a street, ect.
Examples of horizontal lines in the real world include the horizon where the sky meets the land or sea, the straight line of a calm lake's surface, the boundary between the wall and floor in a room, and the straight line of a ruler placed flat on a table. Horizontal lines are parallel to the horizon and perpendicular to vertical lines.
True
I think its true.....
lines on a notebook, grids on graphing paper, and the hands of a clock
What is an orthogonal line?
Most houses are built with walls parallel to each other.
railway tracks, an equals sign ( = ) or the ribs on a central heating radiator. A single line can't be parallel, unless there's another line present. The edges of the question box across from each other. | | | | Yes, the two letters 'el' in the word 'parallel'. Also, a pair of railroad tracks. Parallel lines never travel alone. It is very likely to have the thing you are looking at (the screen) having as least 2 parallel lines.