It's a type of graph. It has coordinates like the ones in Battleship, except these are 2 numbers. It has lots of boxes on it. There are two(2) bold lines, one vertical, one horizontal. The horizontal line is the "X" axis, and the vertical line is the "Y" axis. Like I said before, there are 2 numbers to the coordinate. (Where you put a dot or mark.) The first number is the "X" axis number, and that goes left or right. If it is a negative number, then it goes left. If it is positive, you go right. The other number is the "Y" axis number. That goes up or down. You start from where you left off on the "X" axis, and if it is positive, you go up. If it is negative, you go down. [Ex; if you have the coordinate (5,-3) then you go five to the right, and 3 down, and make a mark on that line.]
A coordinate plain
The real name for a coordinate grid would be a Cartisian Plain. It sounds somewhat like that.
a coordinate system is lines of longuitude and latitude that are used in a map to locate something. There is a coordiante in the Equatorial Coordinate System that is like longitude in the Geographical Coordinate System.....what is the coordinate? Celestial Equator?
Coordinate index ? Sure ! It's easy ... You just have to coordinate your index number !
A point's y coordinate is its vertical position, or how high or low it is.
coordinate plane was created by the Romans
A coordinate plain
The origin, at (0,0)
The real name for a coordinate grid would be a Cartisian Plain. It sounds somewhat like that.
Often Ordered pairs are used to do that
X goes first. Y goes second.
Two facts spring to mind:there is no such thing.you need to learn to spell or use spell-checking software.
A pair of numbers used to locate a point is known as a coordinate pair. In the ordinary number plain this might be (0,0) or (1.5, 4) Any two coordinate pairs allow you to define a line. Higher numbers of coordinate pairs allow you to define shapes or paths
The simple answer is "the coordinates". A more pedantic answer is abscissa along the horizontal axis and ordinate on the vertical axis.
NO. Try to coordinate man.
x-coordinate: abscissa y-coordinate: ordinate
A coordinate plane! If it has one or more breaks in it is not a coordinate plane but only a part of one.