Any line with a slope of -2x is parallel to your equation
When a straight line equation is parallel to another equation the slope remains the same but the y intercept changes
y equals 4x+1 is a parallel line to y equals 4x.
The slope is 5. Parallel lines always have the same slope.
The parallel equation is: y = 4x-3
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.
4x+y = 14 will be parallel to the above equation because the slope or gradient remains the same but the y intercept changes.
y = 0.75x+0.5 For the equation to be parallel the slope must be the same but the y intercept must be different
The equation of such a line is [ Y = -4x plus any number].
You are missing a - or + sign. The answer is 5/2 though. :)
y=-(2/3)x + (n) where n can be any integer.
y=-2.5 is parallel to the x axis. The equation of the x axis is y=0
y = -5x + 9 is the equation of a straight line. It cannot be parallel or perpendicular by itself, you need another line to compare it to.
Known equation: 3x+5y = 6 or y = -3/5x +6/5 Slope of equation: -3/5 Slope of parallel equation: -3/5 Parallel equation: y-1 = -3/5(x-3) => 5y = -3x+14 Parallel equation in its general form: 3x+5y-14 = 0
1, it will have the same slope but the y intercept will be different.
Your answer can vary as long as it has a slope of 1. So it could be y=x+(insert number here)
The is a straight line parallel to the y-axis with an x intercept at -3.
y = 4 or y = any constant number.