In the 1st quadrant
no
2
No because some points can lie in the y & x-axises. Also no because 0y and 0x don't lie in any quadrant because 0 is the origin.
Quadrant I
In the 1st quadrant
no
-1
Well, it could lie in Quadrant 1,2,3,4.
2
In the southwest quadrant. South America is in the southwest quadrant.
In Quadrant I a point would lie if its abscissa and ordinates are equal.
In Quadrant I a point would lie if its abscissa and ordinates are equal.
No because some points can lie in the y & x-axises. Also no because 0y and 0x don't lie in any quadrant because 0 is the origin.
It lies in quadrant I.
The 2nd quadrant and 4th quadrant would be where a point would lie if it's abscissa and ordinate are numerically equal but of opposite signs.
If you mean the point of (-1, 6) then it lies in the 2nd quadrant on the Cartesian plane