That is a line segment that is "skewed up". It doesn't work right. It gets tossed in the heap that becomes other / lesser polygons and such and may even become a dreaded "circle".
sometimes skew
Skew line segments are lines in space which never intersect.
No. Skew lines are lines in different planes that are parallel.
Skew. * * * * * FALSE. In fact, if they are skew, they must intersect. They have to be parallel for them not to intersect.
Line A is skew to Line B, when line A does not intersect line B and also they are not in the same plane.
skew
They can be, and are, "skew". If they are not lines, they cannot be "skew lines".
Skew segments in a triangular prism refer to line segments that do not intersect and are not parallel. In the context of a triangular prism, these segments can occur between vertices that are not aligned along the same face or edge. For example, if you take a segment connecting one vertex on the top triangular face to a non-adjacent vertex on the bottom triangular face, these segments are skew to each other. Skew segments highlight the three-dimensional nature of the prism and the spatial relationships between its vertices.
There is no such thing as a skew plane - in isolation. It can only be skew with reference to something else.
Line, line segment, point, skew lines, intersecting lines, perpendicular lines, that's the ones that i can think of off the top of my head
No. Skew lines do not intersect
skew block plug
your face is a skew orthomorphic
No. Skew lines must be in different planes. Skew lines have no common points (they never cross).
Skew lines are non-coplanar, which means they are in different planes. Skew lines are in different planes and they do not intersect.
Answer is a skew lines do not lie in the same place
skew lines are noncoplanar lines, which means they aren't parallel and they also don't intersect skew lines do not intersect and are not coplanar