The measure of the steepness of a line is known as a line's slope.
"Slope" is the steepness of the line on any graph.
Its called the "slope" of the line, and I think its actually X over Y (X/Y). Where on a coordinate plane, you measure first horizontally and then vertically.
Its gradient, or slope. More precisely, it would be the absolute value of the gradient since the question does not distinguish between steepness from left to right or right to left.
The steepness of a line can be measured as the slope of a line. The letter 'm' is used to denote the slope and it can be expressed as m= (y coordinate of A- y coordinate of B)/ (x coordinate of A- x coordinate of B). A and B are two points on the line.
The measure of the steepness of a line is known as a line's slope.
The "slope".
The measure of the steepness of line expressed as rise over run is called slope.
"Slope" is the steepness of the line on any graph.
slope
Its steepness is the absolute value of its slope.
The slope of a line measures the steepness of the line.
A straight horizontal line is a line having no steepness.
the steepness of the line is the slope of the line which is the rate of change; the steeper the slope, the faster the rate of change
The steepness of a line graph is called the "gradient" ------------------------------- or slope.
slope
I think 'stepness' should be 'steepness'. Steepness of the line is called slope of the line.