Normally x is the horizontal axis and y is the vertical axis
The x-axis is time and the y-axis is velocity.
In an x-y graph, 'x' has two meanings. Firstly, it can represent a variable whose value can be clearly marked in the horizontal axis. 'x' is the set of numbers displayed on the horizontal axis and implicitly outside the graph too. For example, in the equation 'y=ax+b', x represents a variable. Secondly, it can represent a solution or a specific number of the variable above. For example, when you say 'y=2 when x=3' on the curve, 'x' represents a specify number marked on the horizontal axis. You can interpret which one does the author mean.
the slope.
Whatever is being measured along the x-axis, you allocate 2-cm of the line to one unit of x. So, for example, if you are drawing a graph of life expectancy against current age (all measured in years), then each year of the current age (independent variable) would be 2 cm apart.
The X and Y Axis
A Coordinate Graph is a graph which has a x and y axis for you to plot
An x-intercept is the point where a function intersects the x-axis on a Cartesian coordinate plane. For example, if the graph of a parabola is plotted and the graph intersects the x-axis on the coordinate plane, the point(s) where the graph intersects the x-axis are the x-intercepts for that function.
x-intercept
A coordinate graph has two perpendicular lines, or axes, labeled with number and called number lines. The horizontal axis is called the x-axis. The vertical axis is called the y-axis. The point where the x-axis and y-axis intersect is called the origin. I'm doing this in school now!
On a graph, you have two axis, x and y. In an ordered pair, the first number is the x coordinate, and the second number is the y coordinate. On the x-axis, if the x-coordinate is negative then you go left. If the x-coordinate is positive, then you go right. On the y-axis, it works the same way. If the y-coordinate is negative, you go down, but if it is positive, then you go up. For example, if you had the ordered pair (-7,4), then you would go left seven spaces on the x-axis and up four spaces on the y-axis.
that's true
The x values are on the horizontal axis and the y values are on the vertical axis.
Bar graphs are typically placed on the standard X-Y coordinate system. There are two axes: x and y.
Exactly halfway
The x-axis is a part of a graph that provides a reference for the x-coordinates of points.The coordinates of a point are shown as (x,y) with x being the x-coordinate. The x-coordinate is plotted in reference to the x-axis.So in summary they are not the same but related.
I cannot see the graph. I'm assuming the point is on a coordinate graph. Without seeing the graph, the x coordinate cannot be found but I can give a little advice. When reading coordinates, the x coordinate (or x-ordinate to be exact) is the first number in the ordered pair (x,y). To remember this, think alphabetically, x comes before y. On a coordinate plane, to find the x-ordinate you need to count how far left/right the point is from y axis (up /down axis). Given graph paper makes this easier. If you do not have graph paper, draw a line straight up and down from the point until your line reaches the x axis (left/right axis) and then read the number where your line intersects the x-axis, this is your x ordinate. If your point is to the right of the y-axis, the x ordinate would be positive; if to the left of the y-axis, your x-ordinate would be negative; if your point is on the y axis; your x-ordinate is 0.