It means that the y-coordinate (or any coordinate other than the x-coordinate) is non-zero.
A point's y coordinate is its vertical position, or how high or low it is.
they mean coordinate planes.. those are the 2 numbers in the parenthesis when u have a coordinate plane on a graph table. an ordered pair is (1,4) the number on the x and y axis (x,y)
Its y coordinate will be at zero.
If the y coordinate does not change, it is a horizontal line.
Ordinate and Range
The ORDINATE
Math terms that start with Y are y-axis, y-coordinate, or y-intercept.Also the distance measurement "yard."
It means that the y-coordinate (or any coordinate other than the x-coordinate) is non-zero.
A y coordinate is when you have a long line (y axis) and you coordinate (put numbers on that line) and you graph them
On a coordinate graph, the origin is the point where the X axis and the Y axis intersect. That is the point where X=0 and Y=0.
If the y axis is part of the Cartesian coordinate system, then the other coordinate is zero.Their x-axis value is 0.
The y coordinate is -1 and the x coordinate is 4
A point's y coordinate is its vertical position, or how high or low it is.
Other way around (X,Y)
they mean coordinate planes.. those are the 2 numbers in the parenthesis when u have a coordinate plane on a graph table. an ordered pair is (1,4) the number on the x and y axis (x,y)
No, the y-coordinate can be positive or negative.