to find the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
Do you want to know who ruled the Axis Powers?
the axis wanted to kill all jewish people
The allies wanted an unconditional surrender from the axis.
On a bar graph you have the X-Axis and the Y-Axis, the Y-Axis is a vertical line (straight line facing up )and the X-Axis is the horizontal line (straight line facing down) if you want to remember where the Y-Axis is then you say north to south and you draw that and if you want to remember where the X-Axis is then you just sat east to west or you say, Yay Xmas (christmas)
If there is an independent variable then that goes on the horizontal axis. Otherwise, you decide which way you want to plot them.
Carefully click on the axis to select it. Then right click on it and pick Format Axis. Then you can pick the scale option and adjust it to whatever values you need.
if u mean math then its the x-axis if u want the vertical then its the y-axis
== == It depends actually. If you were given a value that is a height and want to find the forearm length from that then the forearm length would go on the Y axis (because it is dependant on the height) and the height on the X-axis. If you are given a value that is the forearm length and you want to know the height then you will put height on the Y-axis and the forearm length on the X-axis.
Normally the vertical y-axis is considered the dependent variable and the horizontal x-axis the independent variable. ie the variable plotted up the y-axis depends upon the variable plotted along the x-axis.
No, they tended to be strongly anti-Communist. The Axis powers were Fascist, the opposite end of the political spectrum.
Usually the variable placed on the x-axis will be the known values to which you want to correlate the unknown variable on the y-axis. Usually sequential information such as sample number or date or time will be placed on the x-axis as well.
Z I suppose under Cartesian coordinates you want the third dimensional axis I'd refer to as the up/down directions with the x & y axis on the plane of the page...