It is a straight line through the origin, with a positive slope.
It is a straight line through the origin, with a positive slope.
It is a straight line through the origin, with a positive slope.
It is a straight line through the origin, with a positive slope.
It is a graph of a proportional relationship if it is either: a straight lie through the origin, ora rectangular hyperbola.
The graph of a proportional relationship has the same unit rate, is a straight line, and starts at the origin.
It is true in the case of inversely proportional relationship.
It is a straight line through the origin.
It can be either a straight line through the origin or a hyperbola.
To find the proportional limit on a stress-strain graph, locate the point where the graph transitions from a straight line to a curve. This point represents the maximum stress at which the material behaves elastically, meaning it returns to its original shape after the stress is removed.
It is a graph of a proportional relationship if it is either: a straight lie through the origin, ora rectangular hyperbola.
If the graph is a straight line through the origin, sloping upwards to the right, then it is a proportional linear relationship.
The graph of a proportional relationship has the same unit rate, is a straight line, and starts at the origin.
It is true in the case of inversely proportional relationship.
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Find the shortest bar and read what state it represents. (In a bar graph, the length of each bar is proportional to the number it represents. )
the graph is directly proportional
No.A directly proportional graph has an equation of the form y = mx. It always passes through the origin.A linear graph will have an equation in the from y = mx + c. This has a y-intercept at (0, c). It doesn't pass through the origin unless c = 0. The directly proportional graph is a special case of a linear graph.
It is a straight line through the origin.
Yes.
There is no need for a scale on a pie chart because the sizes of the slices are proportional to the percentage of the quantity pictured by the graph.