Go what equals 5 units to the left
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The graph of x = 5 is the vertical line which cuts the X-axis at 5. X> 5 is everything (i.e. the plane) to the right of this line.
The graph of x=5 would simply be a vertical line that passes through the x-intercept of 5. Since x=5, any single point on the graph would have the x coordinate of 5, because no matter what, x=5. This is why It is a vertical line through (5,0).
The answer depends on what space you are working in. In 1-dimensional space, it would be like the number line and the relevant part of the graph would be all point at or to the right of the value 5.
The inequality -6 > x+5 can be rewritten -11 > x (by subtracting five from each side) or rather x < -11. To graph this on a number line, draw an open circle over the number -11 (if the inequality included "or equal to" the circle would be filled in). Then draw a line/arrow coming out of the circle over the number line. The line should only be drawn over the portion of the number line that makes the inequality true. For instance, choose a test point. When x is -20, the inequality is true: -20 < -11. So in this case, the arrow coming out of the open circle will point to the left, in the direction that the number line is getting smaller.
The degree is equal to the maximum number of times the graph can cross a horizontal line.