So, this is kind of a hard concept to explain without any pictures, but I'll try anyways.
Think of a plane as like a sheet of paper, and a line as a metal rod.
If I want to intersect the plane, it means that my line (rod) has to touch the plane (paper).
If I poke the rod through the paper, it only intersects it in one place, and I cannot fold or warp the paper to change that.
The only other way I can make these two touch is if I lay the rod on top of the paper. However, when I do this the paper is touching every single point along the rod...
I hope this kinda helps explain why you can never intersect in exactly two points.
Answer:
yes.
Step-by-step explanation:
It doesn't say how long a quarter is for Madelyn's school, but we can assume its around 8 weeks or half a semester which would mean one quiz per week. 1:1 quiz to week ratio is proportional.
Answer:
50
Step-by-step explanation:
50*1.5=75
<span>The change in shape or volume of a rock body during deformation is known as "Strain"
Hope this helps!</span>