<span>In our equations, you can use the generic form of y = mx + b to determine the y-intercept for the function, with b equal to the y-intercept. For g(x), b =2 and for f(x), b=-1. These values are the y-intercepts for the functions. Based on this, the y-intercept of f(x) is 3 units below the y-intercept of g(x). We know this because we can subtract the b value from f(x) from g(x) to get the difference. Difference = 2 - (-1) = 3.</span>
A line parallel to the given one will have the same slope, 0.5. For the purpose here, it is convenient to start with a point-slope form of the equation, then simplify. For slope m and point (h, k), the equation of the line can be written as
... y = m(x -h) +k
We have m=0.5, (h, k) = (-9, 12), so the equation is ...
... y = 0.5(x +9) +12
... y = 0.5x +16.5
Answer:
Explanation: I can’t answer this without an image
4.72n - 0.1 = 8 + 0.67n
4.72n - 0.67n = 8 + 0.1
4.05n = 8.1
4.05n/4.05 = 8.1/4.05
n = 2