-4
A point on a 3-d coordinate system would take the form of (x,y,z). You go x units on the x-axis (left or right), y units on the y-axis (up or down), and z units on the z-axis, (front or back).
-2 left +2 right
A rectangular coordinate plane, also known as a Cartesian plane, comprises an infinite plane (or a part of one) with a pair of axes that meet at right angles. The "horizontal" axis (x-axis) goes from left to right while the "vertical" axis (y-axis) goes from bottom to top. The axes meet at the origin and the location of every point in the plane is uniquely identified by an ordered pair. The first number in the ordered pair is the signed distance from the origin to the point in the direction of the x-axis while the second is the corresponding measure along the y-axis.
x-axisThe horizontal axis in a Cartesian coordinate plane.x-interceptThe value of x at the point where a line or curve crosses the x-axis.== == The first number in an ordered pair which tells the distance to move right or left from (0, 0)
-4
A graph has two axes - the x-axis and the y-axis. The x-axis measures how many units a point is to the left or right of the origin (0,0). The y-axis measures the number of units up or down.
A point on a 3-d coordinate system would take the form of (x,y,z). You go x units on the x-axis (left or right), y units on the y-axis (up or down), and z units on the z-axis, (front or back).
There must be more information in order to be answered. Is it (2,0) or (20,0) or (0,20)? If it is (2,0), then yes, the point is on the X axis. Points are described as (x,y), so if it says (x,0) it means the point is on the x axis, and if it says (0, y) it will be on the y axis. X is how many units left or right the point is, and y is how many units up or down it is.
-2 left +2 right
A rectangular coordinate plane, also known as a Cartesian plane, comprises an infinite plane (or a part of one) with a pair of axes that meet at right angles. The "horizontal" axis (x-axis) goes from left to right while the "vertical" axis (y-axis) goes from bottom to top. The axes meet at the origin and the location of every point in the plane is uniquely identified by an ordered pair. The first number in the ordered pair is the signed distance from the origin to the point in the direction of the x-axis while the second is the corresponding measure along the y-axis.
To plot the points (1, 2), (2, 1), and (-2, 5) on a graph, you would start by drawing a horizontal x-axis and a vertical y-axis to create a coordinate plane. The x-axis represents the values of the first coordinate in each pair, and the y-axis represents the values of the second coordinate. To plot the point (1, 2), you would start at the origin (0, 0) and move 1 unit to the right along the x-axis and 2 units up along the y-axis. The point (2, 1) would be located 2 units to the right and 1 unit up from the origin, and the point (-2, 5) would be located 2 units to the left and 5 units up.
I cannot see the graph. I'm assuming the point is on a coordinate graph. Without seeing the graph, the x coordinate cannot be found but I can give a little advice. When reading coordinates, the x coordinate (or x-ordinate to be exact) is the first number in the ordered pair (x,y). To remember this, think alphabetically, x comes before y. On a coordinate plane, to find the x-ordinate you need to count how far left/right the point is from y axis (up /down axis). Given graph paper makes this easier. If you do not have graph paper, draw a line straight up and down from the point until your line reaches the x axis (left/right axis) and then read the number where your line intersects the x-axis, this is your x ordinate. If your point is to the right of the y-axis, the x ordinate would be positive; if to the left of the y-axis, your x-ordinate would be negative; if your point is on the y axis; your x-ordinate is 0.
On a graph, you have two axis, x and y. In an ordered pair, the first number is the x coordinate, and the second number is the y coordinate. On the x-axis, if the x-coordinate is negative then you go left. If the x-coordinate is positive, then you go right. On the y-axis, it works the same way. If the y-coordinate is negative, you go down, but if it is positive, then you go up. For example, if you had the ordered pair (-7,4), then you would go left seven spaces on the x-axis and up four spaces on the y-axis.
x-axisThe horizontal axis in a Cartesian coordinate plane.x-interceptThe value of x at the point where a line or curve crosses the x-axis.== == The first number in an ordered pair which tells the distance to move right or left from (0, 0)
(-4,-2)
-- Find the point (x = -4) on the x-axis. (It's 4 units to the left of the origin.) -- Draw a vertical line through that point, as far up and down as you want to go. (Technically, it never ends.)