The x-intercept is any point on the x-axis that the horizontal line touches or crosses.
It is a horizontal axis
on the horizontal axis!
It is simply a horizontal line. No special name, unless you're referring to the axis/axes. The horizontal line is the 'x-axis' in a graph.
On the Cartesian plane the y axis crosses the x axis at the point of origin which is at (0, 0)
y-intercept
The x-intercept is any point on the x-axis that the horizontal line touches or crosses.
y = 2 is a horizontal line that crosses the y axis at 2.
The equation of a horizontal line is y = constant (e.g you might have y=2 if your horizontal line is 2 up the y axis).For a vertical line the equation will be x=constant so if you wanted the equstion of the vertical line that crosses the x axis at 5 it would be x=5.If you want the equations of the horizontal and vertical axis then they are:horizontal axis: y=0vertical axis: x=0
The point where the line crosses the x axis? Answer: the x -intercept The point where the line crosses the y axis? Answer: the y- intercept
The line that crosses the y-axis is called the intercept.
No, the "Y" axis is the vertical line, the horizontal line is the "X" axis.
Yes. The horizontal line is the x-axis and the vertical line is the 7-axis.
It is a horizontal axis
on the horizontal axis!
The y- intercept of a line is where the line crosses the y axis. The x- intercept is where the line crosses the x axis.
the horizontal axis (also known as the x-axis) is the horizontal line on a graph.