No, equations with the same slope do not intersect unless they are the same line.
The x and y axes on the Cartesian plane intersect at the origin at right angles
It is where the x and y coordinates intersect.
When y = 0
the origin
Let x be in A intersect B. Then x is in A and x is in B. Then x is in A.
The origin is where x axis and y axis intersect.
No, equations with the same slope do not intersect unless they are the same line.
The x and y axes on the Cartesian plane intersect at the origin at right angles
The x and y axes on the Cartesian plane intersect at the origin at right angles
Think about it, the x & y planes intersect and what one number has both, the x & y planes intersect. 0 on the coordinate plane is the, origin.
f(x) and g(x) are just names of generic functions - they could be anything. In any specific case, where they intersect depends on how the functions are defined. In general, to find out where they intersect you can solve for: f(x) = g(x) Replacing the corresponding expressions for each function of course.
No
It is where the x and y coordinates intersect.
It is where the x and y coordinates intersect.
The origin.
Only if y = 0 then it is the entire x-axis. Otherwise, for y = k and k is any number except zero, the graph is parallel to the x-axis and does not intersect.