Nothing, because there are no positive numbers in quadrant 3.
It will pass through the first (when x is positive) and third quadrants (when x is negative, y will also be negative).
Yes, it is possible for a line to pass through exactly two quadrants. For instance, a line that has a positive slope can pass through the first and third quadrants if it extends from the second quadrant to the fourth. Similarly, a line with a negative slope can pass through the second and fourth quadrants. In both cases, the line does not intersect the axes in such a way that it enters all four quadrants.
A curved line can pass through (not threw) all four quadrants. The maximim for a straight line is three.
I,ii
II and IV
it lies in the 2nd and 4th quadrants
Quadrants I and III, numbered from I at upper right (+, +) left and moving clockwise. The line passes through the origin (0,0).
I would say from an educated guess that it is 0. A straight line could avoid all quadrants if it were placed on the origins of the x and y axis.
It intercepts the y axis at (0, 5) and it intercepts the x axis at (-2.3, 0) passing through the I, II and III quadrants
It passes through Quadrants II and IV. It also passes through the origin ... the point where the 'x' and 'y' axes cross. At that point, it's in all four quadrants.
Yes. Unless the test looks for Seroquel, you are positive, and have no prescription. Most tests do not look for Seroquel. Test only see what they look for.
no