Wiki User
∙ 9y agoYou model your equation on a number line to using a bar model.
Wiki User
∙ 9y agoJoshua Adewoyin
Joshua Adewoyin
Alyse Johnson
I put little lines in it to separate it and then I put numbers above those lines
line plot
20+4=24
lol
The common one is a line. y=mx+b Let's look at the line y=2x+4 This is a line with slope 2 and y intercept 4. The solutions will be all the points on that line and there are an infinite number of them. If x=0, y=4 if x=1, y=6 etc Now you could also look at a system of equations, y=2x+4 and 2y=4x+8. Since these in fact represent the same line, one again the solution is infinite. This is a trivial example just to show you how an infinite number of points can be the solution to 1 or more equations.
Number come from the amount of angles. As in 1 (this number doesn't show it very well because of the additional line at the bottom) there is 1 angle in the number 1. There are 2 angles in the number 2. Three angles in the number 3, and so forth. It gets a little tricky at 7 because there is supposed to be a line in the middle and a line at the bottom. And of course 0 has no angles.
No. If you graph it, it doesn't. No line is horizontal unless the equation is y=A, where A is any real number.
The equation 6 divided by 34 on a number live would be starting at 6 and going to the left of the number line. This is 6th grade math.
how do you show 2/5's on a number line
y = mx + cWhere m is the gradient of the line and c is a constant (the intercept of the line).The equation of a line is typically written asy=mx+b where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept.If you know two points that a line passes through, this page will show you how to find the equation of the line.
It is a straight line equation in the form of y = mx+c whereas m is the slope and c is the y intercept
you put a dash where the correct number is.
line plot
line plot
No number, other than 1, can be part of a prime number.
1/4 is equivalent to 0.25 on the number line
The subscript number next to the chemical element symbol shows the number of atoms of that element in a chemical equation.
Equation coefficients show the number of molecules involved in a chemical reaction.