this question makes no sense. just saying... but are you talking about the hypotenuse or something?
The slope of a line measures the steepness of the line.
It is the slope or gradient of the line that measures its steepness.
The measure of the steepness of a line is known as a line's slope.
A straight horizontal line is a line having no steepness.
If you're talking about a line on a graph the steepness would be defined as the slope. Also know as rise over run. The number of units the line rises or falls divided by the number of units it goes to the right or left
I think 'stepness' should be 'steepness'. Steepness of the line is called slope of the line.
The steepness of a line graph is called the "gradient" ------------------------------- or slope.
"Slope" is the steepness of the line on any graph.
the steepness of the line is the slope of the line which is the rate of change; the steeper the slope, the faster the rate of change
Its steepness is the absolute value of its slope.
The word that describes the steepness of a line is "slope." In mathematical terms, slope measures the change in the vertical direction (rise) relative to the change in the horizontal direction (run) between two points on the line. A positive slope indicates an upward trend, while a negative slope indicates a downward trend.
No