The quadrants where the x-coordinates and y-coordinates have the same sign are Quadrant I and Quadrant III. In Quadrant I, both x and y are positive, while in Quadrant III, both x and y are negative.
That's Quadrant - I .
The negative y coordinates and positive x coordinates lie in the IV quadrant on the Cartesian plane
It lies in quadrant I.
The Cartesian plane is divided into four quadrants. These quadrants are determined by the signs of the x and y coordinates: the first quadrant (positive x, positive y), the second quadrant (negative x, positive y), the third quadrant (negative x, negative y), and the fourth quadrant (positive x, negative y).
The quadrants where the x-coordinates and y-coordinates have the same sign are Quadrant I and Quadrant III. In Quadrant I, both x and y are positive, while in Quadrant III, both x and y are negative.
That would be Quadrant I
That's Quadrant - I .
The negative y coordinates and positive x coordinates lie in the IV quadrant on the Cartesian plane
To assign a point to a quadrant, you need TWO coordinates - the x-coordinate, and the y-coordinate.
The quadrants formed by the x and y axes are numbered anticlockwise from the quadrant in which both coordinates are positive (which is quadrant I). Thus negative x and positive y is in the quadrant II.
In the southwest quadrant. South America is in the southwest quadrant.
It lies in quadrant I.
-1
The Cartesian plane is divided into four quadrants. These quadrants are determined by the signs of the x and y coordinates: the first quadrant (positive x, positive y), the second quadrant (negative x, positive y), the third quadrant (negative x, negative y), and the fourth quadrant (positive x, negative y).
A graph with x and y coordinates has 4 quadrants, so would be a 4 quadrant graph.
The first quadrant is the quarter if the infinite plane where for every point, the 'x' and 'y' coordinates are both positive.