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A coordinate is a specific point on a plane, usually dictated by two sets of numbers.
a pair of numbers used to locate a point on a coordinate plane
The horizontal value in a pair of coordinates: how far along the point is.
An abscissa is the distance of a point from the vertical axis. In the standard 2-dimensional Cartesian plane, it is the x coordinate.
In the Cartesian coordinate system, a point represents a position in a two-dimensional space or plane. This means that that point has an x-value and a y-value. This is written as (x,y) and the entire paranthesis is the coordinate. Examples of coordinates: (3,6) and (-2, 12).
A coordinate is a specific point on a plane, usually dictated by two sets of numbers.
a pair of numbers used to locate a point on a coordinate plane
The horizontal value in a pair of coordinates: how far along the point is.
An abscissa is the distance of a point from the vertical axis. In the standard 2-dimensional Cartesian plane, it is the x coordinate.
In the Cartesian coordinate system, a point represents a position in a two-dimensional space or plane. This means that that point has an x-value and a y-value. This is written as (x,y) and the entire paranthesis is the coordinate. Examples of coordinates: (3,6) and (-2, 12).
The x-axis is infinite. Any number can be on the x-axis of the coordinate plane. If you mean what is the y-coordinate, every point on the x-axis has a y coordinate of zero: (x, 0)
The vertical axis in a plane coordinate graph
The vertical axis in a plane coordinate graph
The vertical axis in a plane coordinate graph
It is the abscissa. The x-coordinate usually represents the location to the right of a fixed point, measured towards the right.
The point in a Cartesian coordinate system where the axes intersect. On a 2-D graph, for example, this is where x and y equal zero. also the point (0,0) on a graph
Intercept is a noun, not a verb: so "to intercept" makes no sense. An intercept is a point where a line or curve crosses a line - usually a coordinate axis.