One if the two lines meet, none otherwise. But skew lines do not lie in the same plane, by definition.
Lines that meet are not parallel, and parallel lines never meet.
orgin? or intersection?
A right angle has no parallel lines, but it does have perpendicular lines that meet at right angles.
All the lines meet at one point: a single solution. All the lines are the same: infinitely many solutions. At least one of the lines does not pass through the point of intersection of the others: no solution.
Parallel lines meet in infinity(they don't meet at all)
An angle is formed when two lines meet (or cross). The vertex is the point where the lines meet.An angle is formed when two lines meet (or cross). The vertex is the point where the lines meet.An angle is formed when two lines meet (or cross). The vertex is the point where the lines meet.An angle is formed when two lines meet (or cross). The vertex is the point where the lines meet.
2 Lines in the same plane that do not meet are parallel. If 2 lines are in different planes and do not meet, then they are called skew lines.
Parallel Lines will never meet
No but parallel lines never meet
No, parallel lines do not meet at a right angle. In theory, parallel lines never meet. In practice, parallel lines on earth could meet at the North Pole and/or the South Pole. Perpendicular lines meet at a right angle.
All lines of longitude meet at the poles; none pass through. No lines of latitude connect at or pass through either pole.