Want this question answered?
In Griswold v. Connecticut, (1965) the US Supreme Court used substantive due process to protect a fundamental right to privacy not explicitly mentioned in the Bill of Rights, by extrapolating from concepts and rights protected in specific amendments.In the majority opinion Justice Douglas said that several of the rights guaranteed in the bill of rights combined to create a penumbra, which is the right to a zone of privacy in marriage.
call them a griswold -dewayne griswold
Misplaced And Undefined
line,points,and plane
He should add his own thought and describe the topic informally and to the undefined level.
"Coordinates" are numbers that describe a location. There is no physical significance to the process of multiplying two locations, and the procedure is undefined.
There are typically three words in geometry that are undefined. The first is "point." A point has no dimension, length, width, or thickness. The second is "line." A line has no thickness and goes on indefinitely in both directions. The third undefined term is "plane." A plane has no thickness and has no boundaries.
Northeast or northern. In the 1800s the Union.
"Coordinates" on a grid or graph are numbers that describe a location. There's no physical significance to the process of multiplying two locations, and the procedure is undefined.
Connecticut Connecticut its the best. We got great plantations but that's not the rest. Ha we got forested hills and great seacoast. Puritan Puritan is our Religion and its the best. Our Constitution is self-governed now that's great. We got cold winters but mild summers. We get your frustration. Come to Connecticut for Representation. So come and connect to Connecticut.
They are undefined because they can't be described without using words that are themselves undefined. For example a point has no dimensions. It is a location, or position. But if you describe it that way you have to define location or position. You can't define backwards infinitely, so we accept the meanings of these things as intuitively clear without definitions because they are the building blocks of geometry and are needed to define much more complex terms.
"It" is used to describe something undefined. In science, you may never use "it" in an experiment because when another scientists is reading the results, they will not know what is being talked about.