No. A label is a heading for data in a spreadsheet. It would be in a cell, which is what the intersection of a column and a row is.
A cell is the intersection of a column and a row.
Cell
That intersection is called a "CELL".
The area formed by the intersection of rows and column is called "cell".
cell (intersection of a column and a row)
In a Excel table (or spreadsheet), the intersection of a column and row is called a "cell." Where a column and row intersect you get a cell. The cell is reference by the column letter and the row number. So, for example, where column C meets row 15, is cell C15. You classify it by its column letter followed by the row number. Such as D3, B2, C5, etc.
A row (numbers) and a column (letters) intersect at a cell. Example: A1, is the first cell in the top left-hand corner of a spreadsheet.
A row (numbers) and a column (letters) intersect at a cell. Example: A1, is the first cell in the top left-hand corner of a spreadsheet.
A row (numbers) and a column (letters) intersect at a cell. Example: A1, is the first cell in the top left-hand corner of a spreadsheet.
The intersection of a column and a row in a worksheet is a cell. The address of the cell is the combination of the column and the row. The Column's address is a letter; the row is a number. Cell A1 is in the upper left hand corner. Cell B1 is to its right but cell A2 is underneath it.
The intersection of row and column is called a cell.
In Excel, as well as most other spreadsheet applications, a row is a grouping of cells that run from the left to right of a page and a column is a grouping of cells that run from the top to the bottom of a page. Rows run horizontally in an Excel worksheet. They are identified by a number in the row header. There are 65,536 rows in each Excel worksheet. The intersection point between a row and a column is a cell, which is the basic storage unit for data in a spreadsheet.