It is called the ordinate.
Which point is not located on the xaxis or the yaxis of a coordinate grid?Read more:Which_point_is_not_located_on_the_xaxis_or_the_yaxis_of_a_coordinate_grid
Any that you like.
Keep in mind that 'ordinate' is a noun and refers to the distance between a point and the x-axis on a Cartesian plane, or the y-coordinate of the point. You could say, then, "The ordinate of point A is (blank)," which would refer to the distance from point A to the x-axis, or if you want to assure that there is no confusion, "The ordinate of point A to the x-axis is (blank)." To my knowledge, that is the only use for the word 'ordinate.'
The first point has a positive ordinate, the second point has a negative ordinate.
If the point's ordinate, or y-coordinate, is zero then it must lie on the x-axis somewhere.
yes, any point " on the y-axis" has its x co-ordinate as zero.
the ordinate
The 'co-ordinates' is where the X ordinate, and the Y ordinate meet at a point.
Coordinate is the common name. Abscissa is used for the information along the X-axis. Ordinate is used for the information along Y-axis. So abscissa is the x co-ordinate, and ordinate is the y co-ordinate. As they are both negative, then the point must be located in the third quadrant.
For a point (x,y), y is the ordinate. So let's suppose you have a point (3,4) The 3 will be three spaces to the right of (0,0) on the x axis. And the y will be four spaces above that. In this example, the ordinate is 4.
(x, 0)