It will depend on the question and there is no clue in the question what it is about!
It will depend on the question and there is no clue in the question what it is about!
It will depend on the question and there is no clue in the question what it is about!
It will depend on the question and there is no clue in the question what it is about!
The parallel line would also have a slope of zero (both are horizontal lines).
Horizontal lines always have a slope of 0.
vertical lines run from top to bottom, horizontal lines run from left to right the difference between the two is 90 degrees if you place vertical lines next to horizontal lines.
Orgin is the intersection of horizontal and vertical number lines.
A zero slope is horizontal or flat, and an undefined slope is vertical or straight up and down. While this answer is in the textbook and notebook of anyone studying the subject, it is easy to get the two mixed up on test day. Try the following mnemonic (memory aid): Look at the letters "z" for zero, and "u" for undefined. The top and bottom of the letter Z are horizontal lines. The two sides of the letter U are vertical lines.
Horizontal lines always have a slope of zero. (i.e completely flat, level surfaces have a slope of zero). However a line does not have to have a slope of zero in order to be a line.
No. Horizontal lines have zero slope. Vertical lines have infinite slope.
run as in slope of a line is zero . horizontal lines have no slope and vertical lines have a slope of zero
On the standard Cartesian graph, horizontal lines have zero slope. They all have the equation Y = a number
No. The slope of a horizontal line is zero. The slope of a vertical line is undefined.
a slope of zero. horizontal is undefined
In general, they are called horizontal lines, but they will only be that if they have a zero slope. They'll be "level" or "flat" lines.
Well, honey, a trapezium can have zero, one, or two horizontal lines depending on its orientation. So, technically, there can be anywhere from 0 to 2 horizontal lines in a trapezium. Hope that clears things up for ya!
For vertical lines, when you try to figure out the slope, you get zero in the denominator - in other words, a division by zero.
When the lines are horizontal and vertical. (slope of zero) (undefined slope)
Yes. There is no positive or negative rise to generate a slope, and it cannot have a run of zero length.
The parallel line would also have a slope of zero (both are horizontal lines).