There are many different ordered pairs for this. To figure it out, make up a value for x. Then plug it into the equation and solve to find y. You can use any number. For example, if x=2, then your equation would be 3(2)+1. Solve that and you get 7 for the answer (y). if x=2, then y=7 so one of the ordered pairs would be (2,7).
An ordered pair, depending on the exact kind of math you're doing, may represent a point on a graph, a piece of data, etc. In elementary algebra, an ordered pair generally describes a point on a graph in the format (x, y).
Each point on a line graph in 2-dimensional space can correspond to an ordered pair of values for two variables which is observed. Or, if it is a fitted line graph, it is an estimated ordered pair.
Infinitely many. Each and every point on the graph gives rise to an ordered pair.
The ordered pair IS the coordinates on the graph. If you have the ordered pair (1,2) that means the value of x is 1 and the value of y is 2, so to get to that point on a graph from the origin (center) you would move right 1 unit and up 2 units.
y = 3x =3(6) = 18 ... the ordered pair is (x,y) = (6,18)
An ordered pair, depending on the exact kind of math you're doing, may represent a point on a graph, a piece of data, etc. In elementary algebra, an ordered pair generally describes a point on a graph in the format (x, y).
an ordered pair Coordinates.
Each point on a line graph in 2-dimensional space can correspond to an ordered pair of values for two variables which is observed. Or, if it is a fitted line graph, it is an estimated ordered pair.
Infinitely many. Each and every point on the graph gives rise to an ordered pair.
There is no ordered pair for y =4. y=4 is a line, not a point.
The ordered pair IS the coordinates on the graph. If you have the ordered pair (1,2) that means the value of x is 1 and the value of y is 2, so to get to that point on a graph from the origin (center) you would move right 1 unit and up 2 units.
y = 3x =3(6) = 18 ... the ordered pair is (x,y) = (6,18)
You can easily test any ordered pair that someone may offer you, to determinewhether the pair is part of the graph of the function [ y = 3 - x ].Simply check to see whether the sum of the two members of the ordered pair is 3.If yes, and only if yes, then the pair is part of the graph of the function.
The equation 2x-5y=-1 has a graph that is a line. Every point on that line is an ordered pair that is a solution to the equation. So pick any real number x and plug it in. You will find a y and that pair (x,y) is an ordered pair that is a solution to this equation. For example, let x=0 Then we have -5y=-1so y=1/5 The ordered pair (0, 1/5) is a point on the line and a solution to the equation.
an ordered pair
An ordered pair has to be in parentheses and there has to be a comma in between the numbers (example: (2,6). An ordered pair is for a coordinate graph.
The coordinates, possibly.