1st quadrant is +x and +y.
The coordinates must be as follows: First quadrant: positive, positive Second quadrant: negative, positive Third quadrant: negative, negative Fourth quadrant: positive, negative
There are four quadrants on a coordinate graph. They are labeled as Quadrant I, Quadrant II, Quadrant III, and Quadrant IV, each representing different combinations of positive and negative values for the x and y coordinates. Quadrant I has both coordinates positive, Quadrant II has a negative x and positive y, Quadrant III has both negative coordinates, and Quadrant IV has a positive x and negative y.
The top left quadrant is II (2) (x is negative, y is positive) The top right quadrant is I (1) (x is positive, y is positive) The bottom left quadrant is III (3) (x is negative, y is negative) The bottom right quadrant is IV (4) (x is positive, y is negative)
If a point is not in a quadrant, it means that its coordinates do not place it in one of the four quadrants defined in the Cartesian plane. The quadrants are determined by the signs of the x and y coordinates: Quadrant I (positive, positive), Quadrant II (negative, positive), Quadrant III (negative, negative), and Quadrant IV (positive, negative). A point could be located on one of the axes (x-axis or y-axis) or at the origin (0,0), which are not considered part of any quadrant.
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).
Quadrant I: x positive, y positive. Quadrant II: x negative, y positive. Quadrant III: x negative, y negative. Quadrant II: x positive, y negative.
The coordinates must be as follows: First quadrant: positive, positive Second quadrant: negative, positive Third quadrant: negative, negative Fourth quadrant: positive, negative
Quadrant I: Top Right: x positive, y positive Quadrant II: Top Left: x negative, y positive Quadrant III: Bottom Left: x negative, y negative Quadrant IV: Bottom Right: x positive, y negative
There are four quadrants on a coordinate graph. They are labeled as Quadrant I, Quadrant II, Quadrant III, and Quadrant IV, each representing different combinations of positive and negative values for the x and y coordinates. Quadrant I has both coordinates positive, Quadrant II has a negative x and positive y, Quadrant III has both negative coordinates, and Quadrant IV has a positive x and negative y.
The top left quadrant is II (2) (x is negative, y is positive) The top right quadrant is I (1) (x is positive, y is positive) The bottom left quadrant is III (3) (x is negative, y is negative) The bottom right quadrant is IV (4) (x is positive, y is negative)
The third quadrant.
If a point is not in a quadrant, it means that its coordinates do not place it in one of the four quadrants defined in the Cartesian plane. The quadrants are determined by the signs of the x and y coordinates: Quadrant I (positive, positive), Quadrant II (negative, positive), Quadrant III (negative, negative), and Quadrant IV (positive, negative). A point could be located on one of the axes (x-axis or y-axis) or at the origin (0,0), which are not considered part of any quadrant.
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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).
In a Cartesian coordinate system, the quadrants are defined as follows: the 1st quadrant (I) is where both x and y coordinates are positive, located in the upper right section. The 2nd quadrant (II) has negative x values and positive y values, found in the upper left section. The 3rd quadrant (III) contains negative values for both x and y, situated in the lower left section. Finally, the 4th quadrant (IV) features positive x values and negative y values, located in the lower right section.
The quadrants formed by the x and y axes are numbered anticlockwise from the quadrant in which both coordinates are positive (which is quadrant I). Thus negative x and positive y is in the quadrant II.
The coordinate plane is divided into four sections known as quadrants. These are labeled as Quadrant I (top right), Quadrant II (top left), Quadrant III (bottom left), and Quadrant IV (bottom right). Each quadrant corresponds to a specific combination of positive and negative values for the x and y coordinates. Quadrant I has both coordinates positive, Quadrant II has a negative x and a positive y, Quadrant III has both negative, and Quadrant IV has a positive x and a negative y.