As for example: y = 3x+6 and y = 3x+9 are parallel to each other because they have the same slope or gradient but different y intercepts
Yes, it is a linear equation with no slope. The graph is a straight line (parallel to the x-axis) that passes through the y-axis, at {0,-3}
When a straight line equation is parallel to another equation the slope remains the same but the y intercept changes
The is a straight line parallel to the y-axis with an x intercept at -3.
y = -5x + 9 is the equation of a straight line. It cannot be parallel or perpendicular by itself, you need another line to compare it to.
it's a straight line. Through the origin.
Yes, it is a linear equation with no slope. The graph is a straight line (parallel to the x-axis) that passes through the y-axis, at {0,-3}
When a straight line equation is parallel to another equation the slope remains the same but the y intercept changes
The is a straight line parallel to the y-axis with an x intercept at -3.
You get a straight line (parallel to the x-axis) that passes through only the y-axis, and it crosses the y-axis at (0,3)
y = -5x + 9 is the equation of a straight line. It cannot be parallel or perpendicular by itself, you need another line to compare it to.
it's a straight line. Through the origin.
On a graph, this is a straight vertical line, parallel to the y-axis, passing through the point (a,0) on the x=axis. Its slope is infinite, and it has no y-intercept.
3x-4y+1 = 0 Remember that because they are parallel the slope or gradient remains the same but the y intercept value changes.
The equation is [ y = 3 ]. Its solution is y=3 . You get a straight line (parallel to the x-axis) that passes through only the y-axis, and it crosses the y-axis at (0,3). For all values of x, the value of y is 3
It would look like a straight vertical line, i.e. parallel to the y-axis, passing through the point on the x-axis where x=3.
y equals 4x+1 is a parallel line to y equals 4x.
The parallel equation is: y = 4x-3