You are traveling upstream on a river. you see a red triangular daymark. what should you do?

Lighted buoys are a type of lateral marker with a matching colored light.

You are traveling upstream on a river. you see a red triangular daymark. what should you do?
You are traveling upstream on a river. you see a red triangular daymark. what should you do?

Daymarks are signs attached to posts or pilings in the water. They are usually red triangles (equivalent to nuns) or green squares (equivalent to cans).

You are traveling upstream on a river. you see a red triangular daymark. what should you do?
You are traveling upstream on a river. you see a red triangular daymark. what should you do?

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You are traveling upstream on a river. you see a red triangular daymark. what should you do?
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Two points are collinear if there is a line going through them. A higher-dimensional counterpart to this is "coplanar": objects are coplanar if there is a plane that contains the objects. There's always a plane containing any three points, so you'd need at least four points (in at least three dimensions) for this distinction to be meaningful. However, it's also possible to discuss two or more coplanar lines, for example - if two lines are not coplanar, they are called skew. To visualize this, imagine a bridge crossing a river: the bridge and the river could be extended into lines that are not contained in any common plane. Beyond coplanar objects, it's possible to discuss "cospatial" objects that lie in the same three-dimensional space. However, you'd need at least four dimensions to even talk about this, since in three dimensions everything is cospatial, in a way. Another related concept to collinear is "concurrent." This refers to three or more lines (or circles) that all intersect at the same point.