an end point
the part with the end point does not, it stops at the end point. But if there is only one end point on a line, the other end does go on forever
A ray has only one end point.
point
No, it has two. A ray has one end point.
It is a segment because it has two end points, point A and point B.
Earth is round and so doesn't "point" anywhere. Its axis of rotation currently points in the general direction of Polaris on one end and ... not really much of anywhere on the other end.
Eventually it will. However, no one knows how or when that will be.Yes, the earth will at some point, come to an end. No one knows when, but all things created and formed have an inevitable end to meet, and the planet earth is no exception.
Yes, at some point all good things must come to an end. But not anytime soon will earth end.
At one point in time, definitely. many of us would think that if the asteroid is going to hit our earth, then it will be the end. Yes it would be the end of us, but our earth may still live on. (like with the dinosaurs).
The main point in city of ember was that the earth will come to an end at that is how it will be someday.
The North Pole is the point on Earth's surface that lies at the northernmost end of the planet's axis of rotation, while the South Pole is the point at the southernmost end. These poles represent the points where the Earth's axis intersects its surface.
The southern end of the earth's axis, the southernmost point on earth. Also see the related link for more definitions.
end point
No - there is a reasonable end to the Earth! At some point in the very far future (5 billion years or so) the Sun will expand to engulf the Earth and that will be the end of humanity if it has survived to that point - I doubt any humans as we know them today will be there to witness this - we will be on other planets in other star systems by them.
A freely suspended magnet will always point in the same direction because it aligns itself with the Earth's magnetic field. This causes one end of the magnet to point towards the Earth's magnetic north pole and the other end to point towards the South pole.
Depends on your definition of "world." If you are talking about the physical earth, the endpoint is relative to your start point. So if you are starting where you currently are, the endpoint is right behind you, since the earth is round. If you are defining "world" as the end of human civilization, the end point would be the moment after the last human has died. If you are defining "world" as the celestial existence of the earth, the end point would be immediately after a catastrophic celestial event that destroys the earth.