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The graph is translated upwards.
Linear
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.
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.
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 a straight line.
the graph is called a 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.