It means that the object in question is moving at a constant speed.If the graph is a straight horizontal line, then the speed is zero.
The one that runs left to right, you mean..
No. It means the distance the graph line rises or drops when you move one unit to the righton the horizontal axis.If you're riding along the graph line from left to right in a little tiny car the size of a pinhead,the slope is the description of riding up-hill and down-hill on the line, and how steeply.
The x-axis is the horizontal axis on a graph. The y-axis is the vertical axis on a graph.
Cuz they grow like that...
distance
horizontal
Lines of longitude are vertical but they measure horizontal distance(In degrees,not kilometers or miles)between Greenwich Mean Time(GMT) and you so the lines are vertical,not horizontal. However,longitude measures horizontal distance,not vertical distance.
It means that the object in question is moving at a constant speed.If the graph is a straight horizontal line, then the speed is zero.
The horizontal lines on a map or globe that indicate distance north or south of the Equator.
If the distance is on the y axis and time is on the x axis, a zero slope means that distance isn't changing over time.
It means that the function is constant.
The one that runs left to right, you mean..
IT IS BASICALLY LIKE AN GRAPH ACCEPTED THE Graph has lines on it
No. It means the distance the graph line rises or drops when you move one unit to the righton the horizontal axis.If you're riding along the graph line from left to right in a little tiny car the size of a pinhead,the slope is the description of riding up-hill and down-hill on the line, and how steeply.
Constant speed..
The x-axis is the horizontal axis on a graph. The y-axis is the vertical axis on a graph.