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Concurrent Line

In geometry, three or more lines in a plane or higher-dimensional space are said to be concurrent if
they intersect at a single point.

PARALLEL LINES
In geometry, parallel lines are lines in a plane which do not meet; that is, two lines in a plane that do
not intersect or touch each other at any point are said to be parallel. By extension, a line and a
plane, or two planes, in three-dimensional Euclidean space that do not share a point are said to be
parallel. However, two lines in three-dimensional space which do not meet must be in a common
plane to be considered parallel; otherwise they are called skew lines. Parallel planes are planes in
the same three-dimensional space that never meet.
Parallel lines are the subject of Euclid's parallel postulate.[1] Parallelism is primarily a property
of affine geometries and Euclidean space is a special instance of this type of geometry. Some other
spaces, such as hyperbolic space, have analogous properties that are sometimes referred to as
parallelism.

PERPENDICULAR LINES
In elementary geometry, the property of being perpendicular (perpendicularity) is the relationship
between two lines which meet at a right angle (90 degrees). The property extends to other
related geometric objects.
A line is said to be perpendicular to another line if the two lines intersect at a right angle.[2] Explicitly,
a first line is perpendicular to a second line if (1) the two lines meet; and (2) at the point of

intersection the straight angle on one side of the first line is cut by the second line into
two congruent angles. Perpendicularity can be shown to be symmetric, meaning if a first line is
perpendicular to a second line, then the second line is also perpendicular to the first. For this reason,
we may speak of two lines as being perpendicular (to each other) without specifying an order.
Perpendicularity easily extends to segments and rays. For example, a line segment is perpendicular
to a line segment if, when each is extended in both directions to form an infinite line, these two
resulting lines are perpendicular in the sense above. In symbols, means line segment AB is
perpendicular to line segment CD.[3]
A line is said to be perpendicular to a plane if it is perpendicular to every line in the plane that it
intersects. This definition depends on the definition of perpendicularity between lines.
Two planes in space are said to be perpendicular if the dihedral angle at which they meet is a right
angle (90 degrees).
Perpendicularity is one particular instance of the more general mathematical concept
of orthogonality; perpendicularity is the orthogonality of classical geometric objects. Thus, in
advanced mathematics, the word "perpendicular" is sometimes used to describe much more
complicated geometric orthogonality conditions, such as that between a surface and its normal.

Intersecting lines
Two or more lines that meet at a point are called intersecting lines. That point would be on
each of these lines

CONGRUENT LINE
Congruent line segments that are equal in length. Congruent means equal. Congruent
line segments are usually indicated by drawing the same amount of little tic lines in the middle
of the segments, perpendicular to the segments. We indicate a line segment by drawing
a line over its two endpoints.

Non Collinear Points :


When the points are positioned in a place, where there is no line then it is termed as
"Non Collinear Points". It is not feasible to draw a straight line through the non collinear
points as the points are situated at different places.

Collinear Points
Collinear points are points that lie on the same line. The word 'collinear' breaks down into the prefix
'co-' and the word 'linear.' 'Co-' indicates togetherness, as in coworker or cooperate. 'Linear' refers to
a line. So, collinear basically means points that hang out on the same line together.

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