The graph is translated upwards.
Linear
The integral zeros of a function are integers for which the value of the function is zero, or where the graph of the function crosses the horizontal axis.
Of course not. The graph can cross the y-axis anywhere ... fraction, mixed number, whole number, or zero, and there are even some graphs that don't cross the y-axis anywhere.
4
Yes
A linear function is called "linear" because it represents a straight line. To graph a linear function, find two points that satisify that function, plot them, and then draw a straight line between them.
The slope-intercept form of the equation is y = mx + b, where m represents the slope and b represents the y-intercept. It is used to graph linear equations easily.
You can graph a linear equation slope intercept by solving the equation and plugging in the numbers : y=mx+b
This is called the y-intercept and represents the value of the plotted function at x = 0.The place where the graph crosses the y axis is called the y intercept.
You could put the equation in slope-intercept form or in parent linear function or even make a table of values.
If it was linear to start with it will still be linear. The slope will change to its reciprocal. The y-intercept will be unchanged (but it will look different)
The y-intercept of a linear equation is the point where the graph of the line represented by that equation crosses the y-axis.
A linear function is a function whose graph is a straight line.
the graph is called a line
The graph is a straight line.
When something has a constant rate of change it means that it has a linear graph. The function can be written in the slope intercept form of y = mx + b.