Yes.
3 lines.
6 lines.
A googleplex of lines.
So long as all of the lines intersect at that point.
Oh, and the intersection can be three-dimensional.
A standard 3-dimensional graph is an example of this.
x, y and z intersect at the point located at (0,0,0)
2006-08-15 13:13:05
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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At the intersection of the lines.
think in three dimensions.
It is not limited to 3 lines
2006-08-15 20:10:51
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answer #2
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answered by aka DarthDad 5
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Sure can... in fact, draw as many lines as you want but have them all intersect at the same place. That point would be the only point that would be on all those lines.
2006-08-15 22:32:26
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answer #3
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answered by Mike S 7
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Yes, a point can be on an infinite number of lines if they all intersect
2006-08-15 20:10:53
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answer #4
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answered by Nobody 3
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Yes, if it's the point at which the three lines cross each other.
2006-08-15 20:09:22
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answer #5
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answered by Rvn 5
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Sure. Consider a graph of the lines y=x, y=2x, and y=3x. The point (0,0) is on all three lines. In fact, it's on a lot of other lines, too! y=4x, y=5x, y=10x^2-x...
2006-08-15 20:09:24
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answer #6
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answered by Master Maverick 6
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The lines would have to intersect or cross at that point.
2006-08-15 20:08:39
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answer #7
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answered by Falcon Boy Toy 3
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Dude if u want the point to go over three lines..well garsh darn it U MAKE that point go over three lines!!!! lol
2006-08-15 20:15:56
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answer #8
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answered by Doll_Baby 2
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Yes.
The lines have to intersect at the point
2006-08-15 20:08:48
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answer #9
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answered by erika_fekas 2
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Probably when the lines intersect?? I'm not a math person ...
2006-08-15 20:08:27
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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