false
An ordered pair, depending on the exact kind of math you're doing, may represent a point on a graph, a piece of data, etc. In elementary algebra, an ordered pair generally describes a point on a graph in the format (x, y).
A point is described as an ordered pair because it is a pair of numerical values (x, y) that are always presented in the same order. A point on a 2-dimensional plane (which is used very often from Algebra onward) is much easier to use if it is described in some way that is completely understandable, using some sort of universal "code" for points. An ordered pair is a pair of two numbers, one which describes how far to the right the point is from a common reference point, the origin; while the other one describes how far upward it is from the origin. This pair of numbers is always in the order (distance to the right, distance upward), better known as (x,y), so it is not just a pair, but an Ordered Pair.
It is the geometric representation, in the Cartesian plane, of the ordered pair.
ordered pair
Plotting the point.
(4,-4)
Which ordered pair describes the location of the point shown on the coordinate system below
An ordered pair, depending on the exact kind of math you're doing, may represent a point on a graph, a piece of data, etc. In elementary algebra, an ordered pair generally describes a point on a graph in the format (x, y).
Since you didn't tell us the point given below, we can't answer this accurately.
A point is described as an ordered pair because it is a pair of numerical values (x, y) that are always presented in the same order. A point on a 2-dimensional plane (which is used very often from Algebra onward) is much easier to use if it is described in some way that is completely understandable, using some sort of universal "code" for points. An ordered pair is a pair of two numbers, one which describes how far to the right the point is from a common reference point, the origin; while the other one describes how far upward it is from the origin. This pair of numbers is always in the order (distance to the right, distance upward), better known as (x,y), so it is not just a pair, but an Ordered Pair.
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.
A point, in two dimensional space, is defined as an ordered pair.
its called an ordered pair. it is an x-coordinate and a y-coordinate (x,y)
It is the geometric representation, in the Cartesian plane, of the ordered pair.
ordered pair
.
The second number in an ordered pair (x,y) is the y-coordinate for that point.