1. The problem asks us to plot the points with coordinates (5, 3), (1, 5), (0, 5), (3, 0), and (4, 2).
2. Each point on the coordinate plane is represented as $(x, y)$, where $x$ is the horizontal distance from the origin (0,0) along the x-axis, and $y$ is the vertical distance from the origin along the y-axis.
3. To find the coordinates of a point, draw a vertical line from the point down to the x-axis to find $x$, and a horizontal line from the point to the y-axis to find $y$.
4. For example, the point $C$ in the figure has coordinates $(3, 4)$ because it is 3 units along the x-axis and 4 units up the y-axis.
5. Applying this to the given points:
- Point 1: $(5, 3)$ means 5 units right, 3 units up.
- Point 2: $(1, 5)$ means 1 unit right, 5 units up.
- Point 3: $(0, 5)$ means on the y-axis at 5 units up.
- Point 4: $(3, 0)$ means on the x-axis at 3 units right.
- Point 5: $(4, 2)$ means 4 units right, 2 units up.
6. Plotting these points on the coordinate plane will show their positions relative to the axes.
Final answer: The points are plotted at $(5, 3)$, $(1, 5)$, $(0, 5)$, $(3, 0)$, and $(4, 2)$ as described.
Plot Points Cfd669
Step-by-step solutions with LaTeX - clean, fast, and student-friendly.