The origin.
a coordinate system
It is the point of origin which is at (0, 0)
The point of intersection of the coordinate axes is the origin, which is the point where the x-axis and y-axis meet. In a Cartesian coordinate system, this point is represented by the coordinates (0, 0). It serves as a reference point for defining all other points in the plane and is the starting point for measuring distances along the axes.
Those are the four "quadrants".
No, in the Cartesian coordinate system it would show a vertical line whose intersection of the x-axis is 4.
The origin
a coordinate system
It is the point of origin which is at (0, 0)
The x-axis typically intersects the y-axis in a coordinate plane at the origin, or 0,0. One can renumber either or both axis, resulting in a different intersection point, but that is usually done only in specialized cases.
point of origin
The point of intersection of the coordinate axes is the origin, which is the point where the x-axis and y-axis meet. In a Cartesian coordinate system, this point is represented by the coordinates (0, 0). It serves as a reference point for defining all other points in the plane and is the starting point for measuring distances along the axes.
Those are the four "quadrants".
Quadrant.
Horizontal axis.
No, in the Cartesian coordinate system it would show a vertical line whose intersection of the x-axis is 4.
The point (0,0) is called the origin in a Cartesian coordinate system. It serves as the reference point for defining the position of all other points in the plane. The x-coordinate and y-coordinate of the origin are both zero, making it the intersection of the x-axis and y-axis.
I'm thinking quadrants would be the answer.