A stanza is a distinct unit of a group of lines in a poem, separated by a space from other stanzas. It usually has a specific rhyme scheme or structure, contributing to the overall rhythm and meaning of the poem.
Stanza
Poems are broken up into usually melodic units known as stanzas. A stanza can be an individual fragment to entire paragraphs.
polygon a shape
Distinct Lines are two (or more) lines that are not equal. This means that they are not the same line (do not have the same equation)
The zebra spider has distinct lines on its back.
The beetle with distinct lines on its back is called a "tiger beetle."
The intersection of two lines can be any of the following:NothingA single pointAn entire line (that means the two lines are NOT distinct)
Stanza
Two distinct lines can intersect at most at one point. If the lines are not parallel, they will cross at a single point. If they are parallel, they will never intersect. Therefore, the maximum number of intersection points for two distinct lines is one.
Not if they are straight lines.
The intersection of two distinct lines occurs at a single point if the lines are not parallel. This point is where the lines meet or cross each other in a two-dimensional plane. If the lines are parallel, they do not intersect at any point, and if they are coincident, they overlap completely but are not considered distinct.
A vertex? In non-euclidean geometry: A two distinct parallel lines intersect in the "Infinity zone"