If the second equation is: y minus 2x equals 3, then:y - 2x = 3 ⇒ y = 2x + 3 and it is parallel to y = 2x.Otherwise (with with missing operator as "plus", "multiply" or "divide"), the lines are neither parallel nor perpendicular.
y = -2x+4 It can be any equation providing the slope is the same but the y intercept is different
The second equation works out as y = -1/2x+6 therefore it is perpendicular
-2x plus 3y equals 1
It is: y = 2x+6 or any other equation that has the same slope as 2 but with a different y intercept
5
(Y = -2x plus or minus any number) is parallel to (Y = -2x + 5) .
[ y = 2x plus or minus any number ] is parallel to it. [ y = -0.5x plus or minus any number ] is perpendicular to it.
If the second equation is: y minus 2x equals 3, then:y - 2x = 3 ⇒ y = 2x + 3 and it is parallel to y = 2x.Otherwise (with with missing operator as "plus", "multiply" or "divide"), the lines are neither parallel nor perpendicular.
y = -2x+4 It can be any equation providing the slope is the same but the y intercept is different
The second equation works out as y = -1/2x+6 therefore it is perpendicular
5
I assume the question should be y = -2x + 5? The equation of a line that is parallel to that line is any line that begins 7 = -2x ... after the -2x any number may be added or subtracted. Parallel lines have the same slope. In the original equation, the slope is -2.
-2x plus 3y equals 1
It is: y = 2x+6 or any other equation that has the same slope as 2 but with a different y intercept
They are parallel.
Y = -2x + 5 so the slope of this equation, along with the slopes of parallel equations, is -2