Yes.
-- The distance/time graph for an object in uniform motion is a straight line,which may be sloped.-- The distance/time graph for an object in non-uniform motion may be a linethat isn't straight. But even if the graph is a straight line, that's not enoughto guarantee that the object's motion is uniform ... the distance/time graphreveals the object's speed, but not the direction of its motion.
the distance time graph will show a linear or a straight line
the distance time graph will show a linear or a straight line
wave
A distance-time graph for an object moving at a constant velocity will be a straight line - the gradient of the line corresponds to the velocity. Non-uniform motion will cause the gradient of the line to change.
A distance time graph would show the distance traveled.
you can show motion by distance against time
the object is not moving
If the motion of the object in in n-dimensional space, then an n+1 dimensional graph, in which one axis shows the time and the remaining n dimensions are the coordinates of the object at that point in time. The wrong answer is a distance-time graph, since that does not show any radial motion. An object going round in a circle around the origin is at a constant distance and so a distance-time graph would show no motion which is certainly not true.
acceleration.
no motion
instantaneous velocity