Class 9 · Maths

Coordinate Geometry MCQs

Take an interactive Coordinate Geometry quiz for Class 9 Maths - tap an answer for instant feedback and a step-by-step solution. These are a few sample questions; practice the full Coordinate Geometry set free on the RankByte app.

Topics covered

Cartesian SystemPlotting Points in the PlaneQuadrants and Sign ConventionsCartesian plane, plotting, quadrants

Practice Coordinate Geometry by topic

Focused MCQ quizzes for each topic.

Coordinate GeometryQuiz - Solve & Score

A few sample questions with instant answers and solutions - the full set is in the app.

  1. Q1. Three corners of a rectangular table are at (8, 9), (11, 9) and (11, 7). Where is the fourth foot?

    • A.(8, 7)
    • B.(11, 9)
    • C.(8, 9)
    • D.(8, 11)

    Answer: A. (8, 7)

    From the stem we have: 8; 9; 11; 9; 11. To find: the unknown asked in the stem. Formula: recall the relevant relation from this chapter (math, chapter 'Coordinate Geometry') that ties the given data to the unknown. Why this is the right approach - fourth corner shares x with first (8) and y with third (7). Therefore the answer is A) (8, 7). Ruling out the other options: option B) '(11, 9)' is incorrect: That is one of the given corners; option C) '(8, 9)' is wrong because That is one of the given corners; option D) '(8, 11)' misses the point - The fourth corner is opposite to (11, 9); share x = 8, y = 7.

  2. Q2. Three corners of a rectangular table are at (2, 3), (5, 3) and (5, 1). Where is the fourth foot?

    • A.(2, 1)
    • B.(5, 3)
    • C.(2, 3)
    • D.(2, 5)

    Answer: A. (2, 1)

    From the stem we have: 2; 3; 5; 3; 5. What we must find: the unknown asked in the stem. The relation that links these is: recall the relevant relation from this chapter (math, chapter 'Coordinate Geometry') that ties the given data to the unknown. Reasoning behind the choice of formula - fourth corner shares x with first (2) and y with third (1). Therefore the answer is A) (2, 1). The other choices: option B) '(5, 3)' fails since That is one of the given corners; option C) '(2, 3)' is incorrect: That is one of the given corners; option D) '(2, 5)' doesn't hold - The fourth corner is opposite to (5, 3); share x = 2, y = 1.

  3. Q3. Three corners of a rectangular table are at (-1, 4), (3, 4) and (3, 2). Where is the fourth foot?

    • A.(-1, 2)
    • B.(3, 4)
    • C.(-1, 4)
    • D.(-1, 6)

    Answer: A. (-1, 2)

    Data from the problem: -1; 4; 3; 4; 3. To find: the unknown asked in the stem. Relation we use: recall the relevant relation from this chapter (math, chapter 'Coordinate Geometry') that ties the given data to the unknown. Why this is the right approach - fourth corner shares x with first (-1) and y with third (2). Putting it together the answer is A) (-1, 2). Where the distractors go off: option B) '(3, 4)' is incorrect: That is one of the given corners; option C) '(-1, 4)' fails since That is one of the given corners; option D) '(-1, 6)' doesn't hold - The fourth corner is opposite to (3, 4); share x = -1, y = 2.

Practice the full Coordinate Geometry set on RankByte

Step-by-step solutions, real mock tests, live National & School ranks and daily streaks - free to start.

Get early access

More Class 9 Maths chapters

View all Class 9 Maths chapters →