An angle.
Yes. Any two rays which have the same end point.
An angle!
its the point of intersection
Not necessarily. If two rays are on different planes, but the planes intersect, it is possible that the rays would also intersect, but the plane intersection would have to happen where the rays are located.
Coplanar rays are rays that lie within the same plane. In geometry, a ray is defined as a part of a line that has a fixed starting point and extends infinitely in one direction. When multiple rays are coplanar, they can be used to form angles or shapes within that plane, and their relationships can be analyzed in terms of intersection, parallelism, or other geometric properties.
A line
Yes. Any two rays which have the same end point.
Yes, numerous rays can have the same point.
The intersection of two lines is always a point or the line itself. The intersection of a line with plane also the same as above.
An angle!
its the point of intersection
Intersection
Finding the point of intersection using graphs or geometry is the same as finding the algebraic solutions to the corresponding simultaneous equations.
intersection
Two rays starting at the same point of origin form an angle
Not necessarily. If two rays are on different planes, but the planes intersect, it is possible that the rays would also intersect, but the plane intersection would have to happen where the rays are located.
point I believe the word you're looking for is "intersection". Two non-parallel lines that lie in the same plane will have one point in common where they cross, and that point is the intersection.