Yes, it is true; slope zero is no slope.
That's true at the point (0.5, 0.25) where the slope of the graph is ' 1 ' .
True.
true
Perpendicular lines have slopes whose product is -1. As this is always true, if we think of .33 as about 1/3, then the perpendicular line would have a slope of -1/(1/3) which is -3.
The slopes will be the same. It is also possible that both parallel lines have no slope defined - if they are vertical.
Yes, it is true; slope zero is no slope.
Yes, parallel lines have the same slope. Parallel means that the lines go on forever and never cross - so, you could practically put one line on top of the other and it would have the same slope (how much it rises in relation to how far over it goes). The only difference between two lines that are parallel is their y-intercept (where they cross the y-axis).
That's true at the point (0.5, 0.25) where the slope of the graph is ' 1 ' .
True.
The line has a slope of -4
it is a negative slope.
true
Parallel lines never intersect. This is a parallel line. _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ True ;
TRUE
Your statement is correct. y=mx+b when m is the slope and b is the y-intercept.
Perpendicular lines have slopes whose product is -1. As this is always true, if we think of .33 as about 1/3, then the perpendicular line would have a slope of -1/(1/3) which is -3.