6
Equations don't have y-intercepts, but their graphs may. The y-intercept of the graph of the equation in this question is 0.7 .
It will be any of the equations that has the same slope of y = 5x+9 but with a different y intercept
The y-intercept equals 0.
Slope and y-intercept of y equals 2.5x is: Slope is 2.5 and y-intercept is 0
Straight line equations:- And if: 3x-4y = 8 Then: y = 0.75x-2 whereas 0.75 or 3/4 is the slope and -2 is the y intercept
I think they will intercept
Equations don't have y-intercepts, but their graphs may. The y-intercept of the graph of the equation in this question is 0.7 .
-1
It will be any of the equations that has the same slope of y = 5x+9 but with a different y intercept
The equations will have the same slope as y = 5x+9 but a different y intercept
The y-intercept equals 0.
Slope and y-intercept of y equals 2.5x is: Slope is 2.5 and y-intercept is 0
Straight line equations:- And if: 3x-4y = 8 Then: y = 0.75x-2 whereas 0.75 or 3/4 is the slope and -2 is the y intercept
When equations are written in the form y=mx + b, "m" is the slope and "b" is the y-intercept. "M" in this case is -3 so the slope is -3. "B" is zero (-3x = -3x + 0) so the y-intercept is 0.
8.3
The intercept is [ y = 7 ] .
The y intercept is -6