A table can have one of three categories of relationship to another table.
A. one-to-one - meaning that one and only one record in table A ever can or will correspond to one and only one record in table B. The ONLY time I have ever seen this done is to make it easy to isolate parts of the table for security or logistics reasons. I.e. table A is the "public" information about something and, for security purposes, table B is a 1/1 relation to A but holds business confidential data that you wish to scrupulously protect more than normal.
B. A one-to-many or many-to-one relationship is often used where one business entity is not "atomic" i.e. it is divisible.
A common case of 1/many is an invoice that has many line-items. One customer visit resulted in one invoice representing the purchase of several items. This is called the parent/child relationship sometimes, where the invoice as a whole is the parent and the line items are the child entities.
A many/1 table relationship is often a definitional or translation situation, in which some field in your table gets translated by a code. Simple (and somewhate contrived) case would be where you use a 2-letter state abbreviation in your invoice table's shipping delivery address (assuming you deliver...) Many invoices will have the same state abbreviation, many/1 case.
C. The many/many case is trickier. If you have a list of several products and at least some of those products can be obtained from more than one manufacturer, you have the makings of a junction table to elaborate the many/many relationship - because Access does not do many/many as a "native" relationship type. You can have many products coming from the same vendor and can have many vendors who supply the same product. There is your many/many case.
D. The fourth type of table is not a separate case but often requires further explanation. One of the possible numbers among "many" is zero. Therefore, it is possible to define a table that sometimes has NO child entries for some parent records. This is just a many/1 or 1/many table that happens to have the chance that there is no extant link. An example of this is a many/many table between products and vendors where there was only one vendor for a particular product and that vendor just went out of business. You have the product but no place to get more of it. OR the vendor discontinued the product line, so the vendor is still valid but the link to a specific product is NOT valid.
Another example of this is if you use pre-printed invoice pads with numbers on the top of the page but at some point someone hoses up the order and has to start over, and that type of pad is such that you just have to tear off the page and void it. IF your business rules are such that you account for all invoices in a pad, then that voided invoice will have NO LINE ITEMS. I.e. a childless parent, a 1/0 case in an otherwise 1/many relationship.
I hope these examples help you to better understand relationship types.