it spins on its axis
A point is not a circle. A point has no dimensions, it is a single, exact location in space. A circle is defined as the set of all points equidistant from some central point.
Center. For example, if the point in the center of the circle was point O, then the circle would be named circle O.
A circle is the set of all points in two dimensional space that are at the same distance from some fixed point.
A point and most of the time meets, a polygon is a circle thing that meets at some point!
A selection of some points on a circle.
The circumstances of a circle are that it is a perfectly round shape and that its perimeter is better known as its circumference.
A circle is the set of all the points that are the same (arbitrary) distance (called the radius) from some (arbitrary) point (called the center).
a chord. i took geometry this year. here are some other things that way help. Circle- a set of points that are equidistant from the center of the circle Diameter- a line segment that passes through the center point and has its endpoints on the circle. Radius- a line segment that connects from the center point to the circle Chord- a line segment that has its endpoints on the circle. Arc- a section of the circle's outer points. Semicircle- half of a circle. Central Angle- an angle that has its' vertex as the center point of the circle. Inscribed Polygon- a polygon that has all its' vertexes on the circles outer points. kk :-)
roads, and planes.
It is the process of a change in position relative to some fixed point of reference.
The radius must pass through some point between the centre of the circle and its circumference.
A circle cannot have parallel or intersecting lines because it is defined as the set of all points equidistant from a central point, resulting in a continuous curve. Any line drawn within or around a circle will either intersect the circle at two points (if it is a secant line), touch it at one point (if it is a tangent), or not intersect it at all (if it is outside the circle). Parallel lines, by definition, never meet, and since a circle is a closed curve, they cannot exist without intersecting at some point or being tangent. Thus, the nature of a circle inherently precludes the existence of parallel or intersecting lines within its geometric structure.