Both coordinates are negative in this case.
It lies in quadrant I.
The coordinates of (-1, 3) lie in the 2nd quadrant on the Cartesian plane
Well, it could lie in Quadrant 1,2,3,4.
A point lies on a line if the coordinates of the point satisfy the equation of the line.
If you mean the point of (-1, 6) then it lies in the 2nd quadrant on the Cartesian plane
It lies in quadrant I.
The x coordinate in the second quadrant is negative while the y coordinate is positive.
The coordinates of (-1, 3) lie in the 2nd quadrant on the Cartesian plane
-1
Well, it could lie in Quadrant 1,2,3,4.
The coordinates of a point are in reference to the origin, the point with coordinates (0,0). The existence (or otherwise) of an angle are irrelevant.
A point lies on a line if the coordinates of the point satisfy the equation of the line.
If x = 0 then the point is on the y-axis and so it not in any quadrant.
If you mean the point of (-1, 6) then it lies in the 2nd quadrant on the Cartesian plane
(0-5) lies in First Quadrant
upper right quad
It is (-1.5, -0.5).