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).
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?
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
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!