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There is, however, a symbol for ordinary lined lines, intersecting lines, perpendicular lines, and parallel lines.

2006-11-20 09:53:28 · 3 answers · asked by merviedz trespassers 3 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

3 answers

In all my years as a mathematician, I have never come across a symbol to denote "skew lines." There may BE one, but I have never seen it. Nor would it be a particularly helpful symbol, in my opinion, since "most" lines are skew...the symbols appear to be reserved for "special cases" (e.g. coplanar, parallel lines).

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Hope this helps!

2006-11-21 02:51:49 · answer #1 · answered by Tim GNO 3 · 0 0

Skew Math

2016-11-13 20:31:09 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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Simply because Paul had emphasized much more on Jesus' death than probably even Jesus himself had intended. The Bible says that Paul was confronted by an angel sent from God, however, I have trouble believing this in light of the things he says and does which pretty much founds Christianity setting up all branches. Paul claims Jesus died for our sins in the book of Corinthians 1 Ch. 15 I believe. Jesus claims in the end of Luke that his work was done, and points out that his work was letting others know the "Good Word" or the Gospel of the kingdom of heaven. Paul took this--unauthorized by Jesus--and shelved it while he set up his own idea of how things went. The death of Jesus being a sacrifice so that we might not need to follow the Old Testament was all his idea. Bottom line is, Jesus preached the good word, and the apostle Paul skewed it. Good work. Now we have some guy's interpretation mixed with another guy's interpretation. As if things weren't already hard to analyze.

2016-04-05 23:34:04 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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