Origin = (0,0)
It Is An Ordered Pair.
It is the distance to the right of the origin, which is the point whose coordinates are (0,0).
The y coordinate is -1 and the x coordinate is 4
The second number in an ordered pair (x,y) is the y-coordinate for that point.
You are going to have a x axis and a y axis on your coordinate graph. Let's say that the number in the x axis is 3 and the number on the y axis is -5. The x axis will bring the x coordinate, which is he 1st number in the ordered pair. The y axis will bring you the y coordinate, which is the second number of an ordered pair. This means that 3, the number on the x axis is first and -5, the number on the y axis is second. In this example, the ordered pair is (3,-5). So pretty much, an ordered pair is (x coordinate, y coordinate). Thank you for reading my answer.
The center of a coordinate plane is called the origin. The origin is the ordered pair (0,0).
It is a plane surface with an origin and a pair of orthogonal axes. The location of any point in the plane is given by an ordered pair of coordinates: the abscissa (distance to the right of the origin) and the ordinate (distance in the vertical direction from the origin).
the x-coordinate is 0, apex :)
An ordered pair of numbers on the coordinate plane denotes a point.
It is at the point of origin where the coordinate on the Cartesian plane is at (0, 0)
The origin, in the Cartesian coordinate system, is the point with coordinates (0, 0). So, if you have another ordered pair, the ordered pair doesn't "have an origin"; rather, the origin is another point.
No, the origin is the point where the x-axis and y-axis meet in the coordinate plane. The x value of an ordered pair is called the abscissa (the y value is called the ordinate).
ordered pair
Ordered Pairs?
ordered pair
Ordered Pair
The pair of numbers are called "coordinates".