Definition:Line

As Euclid defined it: "A line is breadthless length."

This can be interpreted to mean that a line is a construct that has no thickness.

This mathematical abstraction can not of course be actualised in reality because however thin you make your line, it will have some finite width.

It can be considered as a continuous succession of points.

Straight Line
As Euclid defined it: "A straight line is a line which lies evenly with the points on itself."

Line Segment
An alternative definition for "straight line" which is frequently encountered is "A straight line is the shortest distance between two points." This is all very well but it assumes that the line is therefore terminated at two particular points, that is, at either end.

However, this is a perfectly valid definition of the concept of a "straight line segment".

Or, as Euclid put it: "The extremities of a line are points".

His first postulate states: "A straight line segment can be drawn joining any two points."

A line segment, therefore, is any line (straight or not) which terminates at two points.

Infinite Half-Line
An infinite half-line is a line which starts at (or terminates at, depending on how you want to look at it) a points at one end, but goes on to infinity at the other.

Another term for this is a ray.

Endpoint
Each of the points at either end of a line segment is called an endpoint.

Similarly, the point at which an infinite half-line terminates is called the endpoint of that line.

Infinite Line
An infinite line is a line which has no endpoints.