9
5
7
The line 'Y = - 3' has a slope of zero. Any line parallel to it also has a slope of zero. The line parallel to it with a Y-intercept of 7 is: Y = 7
The line y = 6 is horizontal and has a slope of zero, as does any line that is parallel to it.
Since the two lines are parallel, then they have the same slope, 3. Thus, the equation of the line with y-intercept -4, and parallel to y = 3x - 3 is y = 3x - 4.
The slope is 5. Parallel lines always have the same slope.
5
5
When a straight line equation is parallel to another equation the slope remains the same but the y intercept changes
A line that is parallel to the line represented by the equation ( y = -3x - 7 ) will have the same slope. Since the slope of the given line is -3, any parallel line will also have a slope of -3. Therefore, an equation representing a parallel line can be written in the form ( y = -3x + b ), where ( b ) is any real number.
q2
-4
To find the slope of the line parallel to the given line, we first need to rewrite the equation in slope-intercept form (y = mx + b). The equation -y = -4x + 6 can be rearranged to y = 4x - 6. The slope (m) of this line is 4. Therefore, the slope of any line parallel to it will also be 4.
1, it will have the same slope but the y intercept will be different.
7
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.
The line 'Y = - 3' has a slope of zero. Any line parallel to it also has a slope of zero. The line parallel to it with a Y-intercept of 7 is: Y = 7