Without any equality signs the given terms can't be considered as simultaneous equations and so therefore no solutions are possible.
By elimination: x = 3 and y = 0
The elimination method only works with simultaneous equations, hence another equation is needed here for it to be solvable.
y=16 x= -4
You cannot solve one linear equation in two variables. You need two equations that are independent.
The given expression can't be solved as equations because there are no equality signs.
(2,-2)
The answer is that it cannot be done. To solve a set of equations in k variables (in this case, 2) you need at least two independent equations.
16
Yes and it works out that x = 3 and y = 4
With great difficulty because without any equality sign the given terms can't be considered to be an equation.
Usually elimination is used on two equations and is called linear combination. You could solve for "y." That is customary. 2x+3y=1 3y=-2y+1 y=(-2/3)x+1/3
2x + 2y = 44x + y = 1There are many methods you can use to solve this system of equations (graphing, elimination, substitution, matrices)...but no matter what method you use, you should get x = -1/3 and y = 7/3.