It is almost always y vs. x. http://astro.uchicago.edu/cara/outreach/resources/other/howtograph.html
No.
i would have to say that the answer to your question my good sir is yes
The Vice President.
To become the President you must be either: * The President-Elect. * The Vice President when the President dies. * The Speaker of the House when the President and Vice President die, * The President Pro Tempore of the Senate when the President, Vice President and Speaker of the House dies. * The Secretary of State when the President, Vice President, Speaker of the House and President Pro Tempore of the Senate dies. * etc.
No, as you can get social liberals and economic liberals. For example, a liberal may be pro-choice and support gun control, but believe the government should reduce its role in the economy. Or vice versa.
You need to know what the label is on the left side of the graph (assuming that the x axis is time).
Please correct me if I misunderstood your question, but a horizontal axis goes from left to right and vice-versa, and a vertical axis goes from bottom to top and vice-versa.
The rotation of earth on its axis.
Earth's rotation on its axis
Vice versa = in the opposite sense, conversely. It is Latin for "turn position". "The title originates from the Latin phrase, 'vice versa', meaning 'the other way around'." So yes, it is completely latin.
The slope indicates speed (magnitude of velocity). For instance, if time is plotted on the X axis and distance on the Y axis, then the steeper the slope, the higher the speed. That is to say that more distance is covered in less time - and, of course, vice versa for a lower slope.
The same as multiplying any other function by a negative number - after multiplying, positive numbers will become negative numbers, and vice versa.
vice versa
That's a point where the curve of a graph changes from "concave upward" to "concave downward", or vice versa.
The graph for flow vs viscosity shows flow and viscosity being inversely proportional. This means that the higher the viscosity, the lower the flow, and vice versa.
In general the function and it inverse are not the same and do not have the same graph. If we look at a special function f(x)=x, it is equal to its inverse and the graph is the same. Think of the inverse of a function as changing all the x's to y's and vice versa. Well, in the function f(x)=x, all the x's are already y's and vice versa so it is its own invese.
Vice Versa - novel - was created in 1882.