The graphical solution of two straight lines, if it exists, is a single point. If such a point exists, its mean will be itself.
See the related link, "Solution" below.
Two straight lines that remain equal distance apart are parallel lines.
Presumably the question concerned a PAIR of linear equations! The answer is two straight lines intersecting at the point whose coordinates are the unique solution.
Polygon: A closed shape bounded by straight lines.
The graphical solution of two straight lines, if it exists, is a single point. If such a point exists, its mean will be itself.
If they are straight lines, then one solution.
No. A linear equation represents a straight line and the solution to a set of linear equations is where the lines intersect; two straight lines can only intersect at most at a single point - two straight lines may be parallel in which case they will not intersect and there will be no solution. With more than two linear equations, it may be that they do not all intersect at the same point, in which case there is no solution that satisfies all the equations together, but different solutions may exist for different subsets of the lines.
Two or more straight lines meeting at one point.
Straight lines.
you draw straight lines with a ruler
See the related link, "Solution" below.
there are 5 straight lines
Straight lines that never cross are called parallel lines.
Straight
Despite Straight Lines was created in 1983.
Think about this: A straight angle makes 180 degrees, right? Straight lines, when measured by a compass, are also 180 degrees. So, yes, all straight angles are straight lines.