If I felt moved to answer that question, I'd kind of need to see where point 'G' is.
Was there maybe possibly by any chance some kind of a drawing or a picture near
that question, in the book where you copied it from ?
You can change the first or second point to its oppisite
It is the geometric representation, in the Cartesian plane, of the ordered pair.
If the reflection is over the x value, the x-value does not change.
A prism cannot be used to name an ordered pair.
ordered pair
You can change the first or second point to its oppisite
The origin, in the Cartesian coordinate system, is the point with coordinates (0, 0). So, if you have another ordered pair, the ordered pair doesn't "have an origin"; rather, the origin is another point.
A point, in two dimensional space, is defined as an ordered pair.
It is the geometric representation, in the Cartesian plane, of the ordered pair.
If the reflection is over the x value, the x-value does not change.
A prism cannot be used to name an ordered pair.
The pair of numbers you can use to locate a point on a coordinate plane would be called the ordered pair. Used on maps and on graphs to locate the point.
ordered pair
.
The second number in an ordered pair (x,y) is the y-coordinate for that point.
There is no ordered pair for y =4. y=4 is a line, not a point.
Plotting the point.