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)
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.
Cell
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.
A cell is the 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.
The intersection of row and column is called a cell.
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 is called a cell.