whats Two quadrants look like

Two quadrants can be visualized as the two sections of a coordinate plane. The coordinate plane is a flat surface divided into four equal parts by two perpendicular lines called the x-axis and the y-axis. Each quadrant is labeled with a Roman numeral from I to IV:

- Quadrant I: Located in the top-right section of the plane, it is bounded by the positive x-axis and positive y-axis. The x-values in this quadrant are positive, while the y-values are also positive.

- Quadrant II: Found in the top-left section of the plane, it is bounded by the negative x-axis and positive y-axis. The x-values in this quadrant are negative, while the y-values are positive.

- Quadrant III: Located in the bottom-left section of the plane, it is bounded by the negative x-axis and negative y-axis. The x-values in this quadrant are negative, while the y-values are also negative.

- Quadrant IV: Found in the bottom-right section of the plane, it is bounded by the positive x-axis and negative y-axis. The x-values in this quadrant are positive, while the y-values are negative.

When considering just two quadrants, it can be any two consecutive quadrants when numbered in order. For example, Quadrant I and Quadrant II or Quadrant II and Quadrant III. The other two quadrants are excluded in this case.