If you mean 9x-2y = 6 then it is a straight line equation that can be expressed as y = 4.5x-3 whereas 4.5 is the slope and -3 is the y intercept.
Given the linear equation 3x - 2y^6 = 0, the x and y intercepts are found by replacing the x and y with 0. This gives the intercepts of x and y where both = 0.
As it appears, there is no equation but an algebraic term.
2(x - y)(x + y)(x2 - xy + y2)(x2 + xy + y2)
if your solving for y, it's y=7. you have to get y alone and to do that you have to divide 4y by 4. now you have y alone. you also have to divinde the other side of the equation(28) by 4...which equals 7
It means you manipulate the equation in such a way that "y" is alone to the left of the equal sign, and everything else (including "x") is to the right.
Yes it can. A linear equation in the form of y=mx+b can always be graphed used the x and y intercepts.
Divide both sides of the equation by Y2.That will leave you with X / Y2 = Y* * * * *That doesn't quite do it, does it? Try this:Take the cube root of both sides.y = ³√x.
No. In the variable x, alone, it is linear. In the variable y, alone, it is linear. But taken together, in x and y, you have a term which contains xy - that is, a term in which the powers of the unknowns add to 2. So the equation is not linear.
x + 2y6 cannot be simplified, nor evaluated, nor solved.
Multiply both sides of the equation by 1.5
each of the four regions created on the coordinate plane by the x- and y-axes.