false
line
A. Ray B. Segment E. Point F. Line 😊
A plane is the two-dimensional analogue of a point (zero dimensions), a line (one dimension) and three-dimensional space.
zero-dimensional examples: Endpoints of edges (vertices and corners) Zero-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes. one-dimensional examples: Edges of figures (sides and arcs) One-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes.
two-dimensionalOn a+ the answer is three-dimensional
zero-dimensional examples: Endpoints of edges (vertices and corners) Zero-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes. one-dimensional examples: Edges of figures (sides and arcs) One-dimensional figures lie in two-dimensional planes.
Yes.
line
A point zero dimensional can exist in a to dimensional plane because it occupies the zero point in both dimensions.
In mathematics, a zero-dimensional topological space is a topological space that ... any point in the space is contained in exactly one open set of this refinement.
Segment, point, line, and ray
a ray and a line
A two-dimensional figure that has one endpoint is a ray. A ray starts at a single point, called the endpoint, and extends infinitely in one direction. It is defined by its endpoint and another point that indicates the direction.
A. Ray B. Segment E. Point F. Line 😊
' -6 ' and ' 6 ' are not points. On a 2-dimensional (flat) graph, you need two coordinates to locate one point. (On a 3-dimensional (solid) graph, you need three coordinates to locate one point. And there's no such thing as a 1-dimensional graph.)
No, they intersect at a line.
A zero-dimensional object cannot move along any dimension, so it (and everything else in this dimension) appears as one incredibly tiny speck. A point is zero-dimensional. A one-dimensional object is a step up from a zero-dimensional one, since objects can move in only in one direction, and objects appear along an impossibly narrow line. These include the line, ray, and segment.