A line, or straight line, can be described as an infinitely thin, infinitely long, perfectly straight curve (the term curve in mathematics includes "straight curves"). In Euclidean geometry, exactly one line can be found that passes through any two points. The line provides the shortest connection between the points.
In two dimensions, two different lines can either be parallel, meaning they never meet, or may intersect at one and only one point. In three or more dimensions, lines may also be skew, meaning they don't meet, but also don't define a plane. Two planes intersect in at most one line. Three or more points that lie on the same line are called collinear.
2006-10-09 01:11:27
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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vertical
horizontal
oblique
degree the line is angled
sry I dont specify in line examples very well!
2006-10-09 18:50:07
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answer #2
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answered by P!ATD GIRL! Luvn Brendon Urie! 3
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thin ones, thick ones, wavy ones, straight ones, or are you talking about lines that intersect upon the paper, ? IE some times used to denote shadow, LF
2006-10-09 08:15:14
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answer #3
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answered by lefang 5
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Lines of coke, not good for you though.
Lines of bull$hit, I've heard plenty of them in my day
Walking a straight line at a DWI check, I can pass it, don't you worry.
2006-10-09 08:18:36
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answer #4
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answered by BIZ Z 3
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depends on the application, ie in drafting there are object lines, phantom lines hidden lines, center lines etc.
2006-10-10 08:47:41
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answer #5
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answered by ranger12 4
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Do you mean expressive and descriptive?
2006-10-09 09:09:14
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answer #6
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answered by martino 5
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ugh...contour, outline, decorative
2006-10-09 11:28:18
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answer #7
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answered by mark r 3
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