The less than (<) or greater than (>) symbol has been deleted from the question, but the answer is the same:
Draw the line y=1 (which is a horizontal line cutting the y axis at 1) and then shade the appropriate side - above for y ≥ 1, below for y ≤ 1.
For example, y ≥ 1:
././././././.|./././././.
/././././././|/./././././
././././././+ 3 ./././.
/././././././|/./././././
././././././+ 2 ./././.
/././././././|/./././././
--------+ 1 -----
.............|...........
--------+-------
.............|...........
............+ -1......
.............|...........
You graph each of them separately, on the same coordinate plane.
I suggest "boring".
a straight line (the Y-axis of a coordinate plane)
A continuous graph ?
It is a continuous line graph.
no, coordinate graph is a graph made on a coordinate plane i.e xy-plane
You graph each of them separately, on the same coordinate plane.
I suggest "boring".
a straight line (the Y-axis of a coordinate plane)
False
A continuous graph ?
It is a continuous line graph.
It means to put the coordinates you were given on the coordinate plane. Ex. (-3,2) you find it the on the coordinate plane and then you plot it or graph it
well, you find the two cooridinates on the plane and then graph them! KINDA EASY!
true
A horizontal line, 1 unit below the x-axis.
Choose any point and substitute its coordinate into the inequality. If the inequality remains TRUE then the region containing the inequality is the one that you want. If it is false, then you want the region on the other side of the line. You can choose any point in the plane and substitute its coordinates into the inequality. The origin is usually the simplest.