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Ordered Pairs Worksheet with Fruits and Vegetables on a Coordinate Grid

Ordered Pairs and Coordinate Plane Worksheets

Educational worksheet: Ordered Pairs and Coordinate Plane Worksheets. Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.

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Show Answer Key & Explanations Step-by-step solution for: Ordered Pairs and Coordinate Plane Worksheets
Let’s solve this step by step.

We are given a coordinate grid with fruits and vegetables placed at different points. The x-axis goes from 0 to 10 (left to right), and the y-axis goes from 0 to 10 (bottom to top). Each item is located at an ordered pair (x, y), where:

- x = how far right from the left edge (starting at 0)
- y = how far up from the bottom edge (starting at 0)

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Part A: Write the ordered pair for each item.



We look at each picture and find its position on the grid.

1) Pineapple → Look at the pineapple. It’s at x=4, y=2 → (4, 2)
2) Onion → Onion is at x=8, y=1 → (8, 1)
3) Apple → Apple is at x=2, y=2 → (2, 2)
4) Eggplant → Eggplant is at x=1, y=10 → (1, 10)
5) Broccoli → Broccoli is at x=9, y=5 → (9, 5)

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Part B: Write the item located at each ordered pair.



Now we go to the coordinates given and see what’s there.

6) (2, 2) → Go to x=2, y=2 → That’s the apple
7) (9, 7) → Go to x=9, y=7 → That’s the lemon
8) (2, 7) → Go to x=2, y=7 → That’s the watermelon
9) (3, 4) → Go to x=3, y=4 → That’s the beetroot (or radish — it’s the red round veggie with green leaves)
10) (7, 3) → Go to x=7, y=3 → That’s the tomato

*(Note: In some contexts, #9 might be called “radish” or “turnip”, but based on common worksheet usage and appearance, “beetroot” is acceptable. However, looking again — in many such worksheets, that item is labeled as “radish”. But since the image doesn’t label them, we’ll use the most visually accurate name. Actually, let’s double-check: at (3,4) it’s a dark red root with green tops — commonly called “beet” or “beetroot”. We’ll stick with that.)*

Wait — let me recheck all positions carefully to avoid mistakes.

Rechecking Part A:

1) Pineapple → x=4, y=2 → (4,2)
2) Onion → x=8, y=1 → (8,1)
3) Apple → x=2, y=2 → (2,2)
4) Eggplant → x=1, y=10 → (1,10)
5) Broccoli → x=9, y=5 → (9,5)

Part B:

6) (2,2) → apple →
7) (9,7) → lemon →
8) (2,7) → watermelon →
9) (3,4) → beetroot →
10) (7,3) → tomato →

All correct.

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Final Answer:

A)
1) (4, 2)
2) (8, 1)
3) (2, 2)
4) (1, 10)
5) (9, 5)

B)
6) apple
7) lemon
8) watermelon
9) beetroot
10) tomato
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of coordinate grid worksheets.
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