The quadrants where the x-coordinates and y-coordinates have the same sign are Quadrant I and Quadrant III. In Quadrant I, both x and y are positive, while in Quadrant III, both x and y are negative.
The sum of a set of addends whose sign is the same is the sum of the absolute values of the addends with the same sign as the addends.
Add their magnitudes, and keep the same sign for the sum.
Do the addition. Keep the sign.
The = sign
Add the magnitudes, keep the sign.
Quadrants I and III. In Quadrant I, the values are both positive. In Quadrant III, the values are both negative.
You can divide an area into any number of smaller areas. The special relevance of "quadrants" is that it distinguishes points on a plane by the sign of the coordinates. For example, points in the first quadrant have both the x-coordinate and the y-coordinate positive.
how do you sign the word "same"?
What is the product of three same sign of integers
The product has the same sign as the numbers.
The sum of a set of addends whose sign is the same is the sum of the absolute values of the addends with the same sign as the addends.
There are four quadrants (hence the name "quad"). Draw a crossing vertical line (Y axis) and horizontal line (X axis). The areas to the "top right", "bottom right", "bottom left" and "top left" are the four quadrants. Which quadrant any given co-ordinate lies in depends upon the sign of the X & Y values. eg (+X,+Y) (+X,-Y) (-X,-Y) or (-X,+Y) respectively.
No but it is a little bit the same
Add their magnitudes, and keep the same sign for the sum.
Do the addition. Keep the sign.
Same place as the minus sign
No. Not only that, but they didn't all sign it on the same day.