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Perpendicular lines are lines that intersect at a 90-degree angle. They can be visualized as forming a right angle or "L" shape. Parallel lines, on the other hand, are lines that never intersect and always stay the same distance apart. They can be visualized as two train tracks that never meet. Intersecting lines are lines that cross or meet at a single point. They do not have to be perpendicular or parallel, and their intersection forms an angle other than 90 degrees.
it's actually pretty simple, you draw the line vertically, the draw three parallelograms representing the planes around the line almost making it like a 3D shape....
Mark two point an ony two sides. Join these with lines that do not intersect within the shape.Mark two point an ony two sides. Join these with lines that do not intersect within the shape.Mark two point an ony two sides. Join these with lines that do not intersect within the shape.Mark two point an ony two sides. Join these with lines that do not intersect within the shape.
Any shape that contains a section of a plane can have an infinite number of parallel lines in it.
Perpendicular lines are lines that eventually intersect, and intersecting means when the run into eachother. For example, the "L" shape are two perpendicular lines because the lines run into eachother.
A common shape that has lines that never intersect is the equals sign. Shapes that include intersecting lines but also have others that will never intersect include squares, rectangles, and rhombuses.
If there are no intersections, there is no way to create a closed figure or shape. All you can have is an infinite plane - or a "slice" of an infinite plane.
Perpendicular lines are lines that intersect at a 90-degree angle. They can be visualized as forming a right angle or "L" shape. Parallel lines, on the other hand, are lines that never intersect and always stay the same distance apart. They can be visualized as two train tracks that never meet. Intersecting lines are lines that cross or meet at a single point. They do not have to be perpendicular or parallel, and their intersection forms an angle other than 90 degrees.
it's actually pretty simple, you draw the line vertically, the draw three parallelograms representing the planes around the line almost making it like a 3D shape....
Mark two point an ony two sides. Join these with lines that do not intersect within the shape.Mark two point an ony two sides. Join these with lines that do not intersect within the shape.Mark two point an ony two sides. Join these with lines that do not intersect within the shape.Mark two point an ony two sides. Join these with lines that do not intersect within the shape.
Any shape that contains a section of a plane can have an infinite number of parallel lines in it.
Any plane shape that has two or more sets of parallel lines. For example, any regular polygon with an even number of sides.
when the lines forming two sides of a shape if continued forever in both directions for eternity would never touch or intersect. meanint they are the same line but on different axisExtending in the same direction, everywhere equidistant, and not meeting.
Perpendicular lines are lines that eventually intersect, and intersecting means when the run into eachother. For example, the "L" shape are two perpendicular lines because the lines run into eachother.
It is a circle whose lines of symmetry are infinite
A closed plane figure, for example, a sector of a circular or elliptical shape has no specific name.
cube