Question
Which statement(s) correctly describe y-intercepts? Check all that apply.
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Which statement(s) correctly describe y-intercepts? Check all that apply.
The y-intercept of a function is the point where the line intersects the y-axis.
The y-intercept of a function is the point at which x = 0.
The y-value of the y-intercept is the same as the starting value, b.
The y-intercept of a function is always 0.
The y-intercept of a function is always positive.
The y-intercept of a function is always negative.
The y-intercept of a function is the point at which y = 0.
image.png
Which statement(s) correctly describe y-intercepts? Check all that apply.
The y-intercept of a function is the point where the line intersects the y-axis.
The y-intercept of a function is the point at which x = 0.
The y-value of the y-intercept is the same as the starting value, b.
The y-intercept of a function is always 0.
The y-intercept of a function is always positive.
The y-intercept of a function is always negative.
The y-intercept of a function is the point at which y = 0.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The following statements correctly describe y-intercepts:
1. **The y-intercept of a function is the point where the line intersects the y-axis.**
2. **The y-intercept of a function is the point at which x = 0.**
3. **The y-value of the y-intercept is the same as the starting value, b.**
The other statements are incorrect:
- **The y-intercept of a function is always 0.** (This is false; the y-intercept can be any value, not just 0.)
- **The y-intercept of a function is always positive.** (This is false; the y-intercept can be negative or zero as well.)
- **The y-intercept of a function is always negative.** (This is also false; similar to the above, it can be positive or zero.)
- **The y-intercept of a function is the point at which y = 0.** (This is false; at the y-intercept, x = 0, not y.)
So, the correct statements are the first three listed above.
1. **The y-intercept of a function is the point where the line intersects the y-axis.**
2. **The y-intercept of a function is the point at which x = 0.**
3. **The y-value of the y-intercept is the same as the starting value, b.**
The other statements are incorrect:
- **The y-intercept of a function is always 0.** (This is false; the y-intercept can be any value, not just 0.)
- **The y-intercept of a function is always positive.** (This is false; the y-intercept can be negative or zero as well.)
- **The y-intercept of a function is always negative.** (This is also false; similar to the above, it can be positive or zero.)
- **The y-intercept of a function is the point at which y = 0.** (This is false; at the y-intercept, x = 0, not y.)
So, the correct statements are the first three listed above.
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