I had this question in my physics class as well and the answer is vector :)
A physical quantity that is specified by both magnitude and direction is a vector by definition.
A force is a vector quantity because it has both magnitude and direction.
A quantity with both magnitude and direction is a Vector quantity.
Speed is a scalar quantity because it has magnitude but not direction, velocity is a vector quantity because it has magnitude and direction.
This is known as a vector quantity.
Vectors need both magnitude and direction.
A physical quantity that is specified by both magnitude and direction is a vector by definition.
A force is a vector quantity because it has both magnitude and direction.
A quantity with both magnitude and direction is a Vector quantity.
Speed is a scalar quantity because it has magnitude but not direction, velocity is a vector quantity because it has magnitude and direction.
This is known as a vector quantity.
A vector is a directed segment representing a quantity that has both magnitude and direction. <Hope this helped!>
for a vector quantity it must have both magnitude and direction and since it has both magnitude and direction it is therefore considered a vector
Velocity refers to both speed and direction. A vector refers to both magnitude (the speed in this case) and a direction. Speed without reference to a direction is a scalar, a magnitude without direction.
In the quaternion analysis, a quantity that has magnitude, but not direction; -- distinguished from a vector, which has both magnitude and direction.
A scalar quantity defines only magnitude, while a vector quantity defines both a magnitude and direction.
A scalar quantity defines only magnitude, while a vector quantity defines both a magnitude and direction.