The x-axis is the horizontal line that correlates with the vertical y-axis.
its the x-axis on a line graph
The y- intercept of a line is where the line crosses the y axis. The x- intercept is where the line crosses the x axis.
On graph paper. The horizontal line is the x-axis. The vertical line is the y-axis. Where the two line intersect is deemed to be the origin, and given the co-ordinates , in (x,y) form , of (0,0).
The y-intercept is where the line crosses the y-axis, and the x-intercept is where the line cross the x-axis
The x axis is horizontal; the y axis is vertical
The horizonal axis (x)
"X" is the vertical line on a mathematical/scientific or geographical graphAnd, "Y" is the horizontal line
They do unless they're perfectly vertical. If the equation of a line is [ x = a number ], then it has no y-intercept. If 'y' appears in the equation at all, then the line has a y-intercept.
Yes. The horizontal line is the x-axis and the vertical line is the 7-axis.
The x-axis is the horizontal line that correlates with the vertical y-axis.
The point where the line crosses the x axis? Answer: the x -intercept The point where the line crosses the y axis? Answer: the y- intercept
On the Cartesian plane the x line is the horizontal axis and the y line is the vertical axis.
x axis means the horizontal line and y axis means the vertical line
The x-axis represent the horizontal line while the y-axis represents the vertical line.
The x-coordinate of any point on the y-axis is 0. The y-axis is a line perpendicular to the x-axis. Any point on a line perpendicular to the x-axis has the same x-coordinate. The y-axis is the line perpendicular to the x-axis through 0, and has the equation x = 0; similarly, the x-axis is the line perpendicular to the y-axis through 0 and has the equation y = 0.
Zero