Asked by ty'meriah robinson
in which quadrant of the coordinate graph does point j lie
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
To determine which quadrant a point \( J \) lies in, you'll need the coordinates of point \( J \), typically expressed as \( (x, y) \). The quadrants are defined as follows:
- **Quadrant I:** \( x > 0 \) and \( y > 0 \)
- **Quadrant II:** \( x < 0 \) and \( y > 0 \)
- **Quadrant III:** \( x < 0 \) and \( y < 0 \)
- **Quadrant IV:** \( x > 0 \) and \( y < 0 \)
If \( J \) is on one of the axes (i.e., \( x = 0 \) or \( y = 0 \)), it does not fall into any quadrant. Please provide the coordinates of point \( J \) for a specific answer.
- **Quadrant I:** \( x > 0 \) and \( y > 0 \)
- **Quadrant II:** \( x < 0 \) and \( y > 0 \)
- **Quadrant III:** \( x < 0 \) and \( y < 0 \)
- **Quadrant IV:** \( x > 0 \) and \( y < 0 \)
If \( J \) is on one of the axes (i.e., \( x = 0 \) or \( y = 0 \)), it does not fall into any quadrant. Please provide the coordinates of point \( J \) for a specific answer.
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