A question quadrant is a tool used to categorize and prioritize questions based on their importance and urgency. Questions are divided into four quadrants: important and urgent, important but not urgent, not important but urgent, and not important and not urgent. This helps individuals or teams focus on addressing the most critical questions first.
1 quadrant = 1 quadrant. Or what is the question?
Assuming the question is about negative 145 DEGREES, even though the question does not say so, the answer is the third quadrant.
If A is in quadrant IV, then A/2 is in quadrant II. Yes, the fact than cos(A) is 0.1 means that A is in quadrant I or IV, but it really is not required in order to answer the question. It is superfluous.
clarify your question a bit man !
Quadrant I : (+, +) Quadrant II : (-, +) Quadrant III : (-, -) Quadrant IV : (+, -)
Quadrant I ( + , + ) Quadrant II ( - , + ) Quadrant III ( - , - ) Quadrant IV ( + , - )
Quadrant 3 Quadrant 4 Quadrant 2 Quadrant 1
The value of x will be negative in the bottom left quadrant (quadrant 3) and the top left quadrant (quadrant 2).
Quadrant 1: (1,5) Quadrant 2: (-2,3) Quadrant 3: (-3,-3) Quadrant 4:(4,-1)
The names of the quadrants on a graph are: First quadrant Second quadrant Third quadrant Fourth quadrant
The meaning of the question is not at all clear. Quadrant IV contains points whose x-coordinate is positive and the y-coordinate is negative. So what is meant by the "point" being negative? Also, quadrant IV is not an operation. So what is meant by its converse?
Oh, what a happy little question! To find the area of a quadrant, you simply take the area of a full circle (πr^2) and divide it by 4, since a quadrant is one-fourth of a circle. Just remember to use the radius of the circle to calculate the area of the quadrant. Happy calculating!