There is no slope nor intercept because there is no equation, simply an expression.
y = -4x The y-intercept is zero. That is, the graph passes through the origin.
This question cannot be answered because there is no graph to tell where the y-intercept is.
If you mean y = -2x-6 then y intersect the graph at (0, -6)
Simply put: Without a y-axis, you don't have a graph.
It shows the relationship of y in terms of x. [y = (yIntercept) + ((slope)*(x))] [slope = (y2 - y1)/(x2 - x1)]
There is no slope nor intercept because there is no equation, simply an expression.
To translate the graph y = x to the graph of y = x - 6, shift the graph of y = x down 6 units.
Without the y-axis, you don't have a graph.
You can write it either in standard form (ax + by = c) or in slope-intercept form (y = mx + b)
First, reflect the graph of y = x² in the x-axis (line y = 0) to obtain the graph of y = -x²; then second, shift it 3 units up to obtain the graph of y = -x² + 3.
The y-intercept on the graph shows where the graph crosses the y-axis. The value is always the value of y at that point, because x is always equal to zero.
y = -4x The y-intercept is zero. That is, the graph passes through the origin.
The y axis is going up on the graph and the x axis is going sideways on the graph
A graph intersects the y-axis at the y-intercept; its x value is zero.
This question cannot be answered because there is no graph to tell where the y-intercept is.
You can do the equation Y 2x plus 3 on a graph. On this graph the Y would equal 5 and X would equal to 0.