simultaneous equations
A.infinitely manyB.oneD.zero
An independent system has one solution.
I have never seen the term 'symbolic' used in this way. There are 4 methods used to solve a system of linear equations in two variables. Graphing, Substitution, Elimination, and Cramer's Rule.
None, one or infinitely many.
Simultaneous equations have at least two unknown variables.
A system of linear equations is two or more simultaneous linear equations. In mathematics, a system of linear equations (or linear system) is a collection of linear equations involving the same set of variables.
A system of linear equations.
The solution of a system of linear equations is a pair of values that make both of the equations true.
simultaneous equations
Yes.
A.infinitely manyB.oneD.zero
A "system" of equations is a set or collection of equations that you deal with all together at once. Linear equations (ones that graph as straight lines) are simpler than non-linear equations, and the simplest linear system is one with two equations and two variables.
No. At least, it can't have EXACTLY 3 solutions, if that's what you mean. A system of two linear equations in two variables can have:No solutionOne solutionAn infinite number of solutions
The statement "A system of linear equations is a set of two or more equations with the same variables and the graph of each equation is a line" is true.
An independent system has one solution.
I have never seen the term 'symbolic' used in this way. There are 4 methods used to solve a system of linear equations in two variables. Graphing, Substitution, Elimination, and Cramer's Rule.