The x and y coordinates are both positive in Q I.
They are both negative in Q III
The quadrants where the x-coordinates and y-coordinates have the same sign are Quadrant I and Quadrant III. In Quadrant I, both x and y are positive, while in Quadrant III, both x and y are negative.
Quadrants 2 and 3 have negative X values.
The Cartesian plane is divided into four quadrants. These quadrants are determined by the signs of the x and y coordinates: the first quadrant (positive x, positive y), the second quadrant (negative x, positive y), the third quadrant (negative x, negative y), and the fourth quadrant (positive x, negative y).
X-Y Coordinates Origin Quadrants Points
false
The x-axis and y-axis divide the coordinate plane into four regions called quadrants. These quadrants are typically labeled as Quadrant I (positive x and y), Quadrant II (negative x and positive y), Quadrant III (negative x and y), and Quadrant IV (positive x and negative y). Each quadrant represents a different combination of signs for the x and y coordinates.
A graph with x and y coordinates has 4 quadrants, so would be a 4 quadrant graph.
They satisfy the equation x + y = 0
Yes or no? I have no idea
I assume you mean (8, 0). If one or both of the coordinates are zero, the point is not in any of the four quadrants. Instead, it is on the axes - between two quadrants.
In algebra and mathematics , names are given to x coordinates and y coordinates as : x coordinates are known as abssisca. Y coordinates are known as ordinate.
Quadrants I and III. In Quadrant I, the values are both positive. In Quadrant III, the values are both negative.