A coordinate plane has infinitely many ordered pairs: each and every point in the plane is represented by an ordered pair. There may be a small number of points that are identified for a specific reason: for example the vertices of a triangle or quadrilateral and so you may have a few ordered pairs that are specifically labelled.
The Ordered Pairs are 1x20, 2x10, and 5x4.
-1 is a one-dimensional entity. It can have no equivalent in ordered pairs.
Y is the second number in a set of ordered pairs.
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A coordinate plane has infinitely many ordered pairs: each and every point in the plane is represented by an ordered pair. There may be a small number of points that are identified for a specific reason: for example the vertices of a triangle or quadrilateral and so you may have a few ordered pairs that are specifically labelled.
The Ordered Pairs are 1x20, 2x10, and 5x4.
It is not possible to answer the question with no information about which ordered pairs!
-1 is a one-dimensional entity. It can have no equivalent in ordered pairs.
Y is the second number in a set of ordered pairs.
Ordered pairs that have a negative x and a positive y are in the second quadrant.
Ordered pairs are used for many things. Anytime you graph a point on a cartesian coordinate system, you have an ordered pair. In fact, all of R^2 is made up of ordered pairs. When you put a value in a function and get one out, you have an ordered pair
there are none, ordered pairs come from equations like x = 2y -5
If a set of ordered pairs is not a relation, the set can still be a function.
Yes. That's why it is called "ordered".
Coordinates
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