(Y = -2x plus or minus any number) is parallel to (Y = -2x + 5) .
2y= 3x+6
7
y = -3x + 7 is an equation which gives us a line parallel to the line y = -3x + 1, or the line -3x - 1. The equation given represents the slope-intercept form of the equation for a line. Slope-intercept takes the form y = mx + b. In this form the the value of m represents the slope of the line, while b represents the Y intercept. All lines with the same slope are parallel (unless they're exactly the same.) So to find a parallel line, we simply adjust the Y intercept to any value other than the one given.
in a graph, a line with a zero slope is the one that is parallel to the x-axis. It is represented by an equation of the form y = a constant, independent of x values.
5
To determine an equation that represents a line parallel to a given line, you need to identify the slope of the original line. Lines that are parallel have the same slope but different y-intercepts. Therefore, if the equation of the original line is in slope-intercept form (y = mx + b), any line parallel to it will also be of the form (y = mx + c), where (c) is a different constant.
Any equation with the form y=c is parallel to the y-axis, where c is a constant.
If you mean y = 2x-3 then the parallel equation will have the same slope of 2 but with a different y intercept
To find a line that is parallel to the line represented by the equation ( y - 4x + 5 = 0 ), we first rewrite it in slope-intercept form: ( y = 4x - 5 ). The slope of this line is 4. A parallel line will have the same slope, so a general equation for a parallel line can be expressed as ( y = 4x + b ), where ( b ) is any real number.
x=4
2y= 3x+6
4
[ y = plus or minus any number ] is parallel to the x-axis.
5
Without an equality sign it is not an equation but when a straight line equation is parallel to another straight line the slope remains the same but the y intercept is different
q2
-4