Thinking Mathematically (6th Edition)

Published by Pearson
ISBN 10: 0321867327
ISBN 13: 978-0-32186-732-2

Chapter 10 - Geometry - 10.1 Points, Lines, Planes, and Angles - Exercise Set 10.1 - Page 618: 71

Answer

The everyday approximate are as follows: Point –Star (as seen in sky), a bead, dots on a map and cells. Line - Central line on highways, train tracks, the streets and line on a piece of paper. Plane - Whiteboard, a piece of paper, a table and a sheet of paper.

Work Step by Step

Point: It is represented as a dot that has no length, no width, and no thickness. The everyday approximate of the point is a star, a bead, dots on a map and cells. Lines: When two points are connected to each other from the shortest possible path it is called as a line. The everyday approximate of lines is a central line on highways, train tracks, the streets and line on a piece of paper. Plane: It is defined as a flat surface that has no thickness and no boundaries. The everyday approximate of planes is a whiteboard, a piece of paper, a table and a sheet of paper.
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