The opening lines of "The Real World" can vary based on the specific context or work you're referring to, as there's no singular text universally recognized by that title. If you mean a specific book, movie, or series with that name, please clarify which one, and I can provide more information. Otherwise, "the real world" often refers to the practical, everyday experiences and challenges one faces outside of theoretical or fictional contexts.
Hi-yo Silver, away! (Siilver was the name of his horse.)
The opening lines start the play off like other plays, with an exposition. There are guards waiting for an impending attack while one of the guards fear that there is a ghost among them. The unease comes from the guard who is "sick at heart" (the ghost is making him nervous).
real world
real world
No. It is a satire site - along the lines of The Onion.
Roads are an example of intersecting lines in the real world.
Did you mean "real world examples of parallel lines"? If so, railroad tracks are a perfect example.
I think the road is a intersecting lines do you think that is write?
lines on a notebook, grids on graphing paper, and the hands of a clock
True
Yes. Well, that might not be true. The lines will change everyday and it depends what time of year it is.
I think its true.....
Dreams are just dreams, they have no real world relevance.
Transversal lines cut through or touch parallel lines as for example support sleepers on a rail track or transversal supports on a gate
Examples of horizontal lines in the real world include the horizon where the sky meets the land or sea, the straight line of a calm lake's surface, the boundary between the wall and floor in a room, and the straight line of a ruler placed flat on a table. Horizontal lines are parallel to the horizon and perpendicular to vertical lines.
What is an orthogonal line?
By opening a tap