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Question
refer to your graph on the previous page, if needed. which of the equations provided makes the most sense to represent all the points with y - coordinate - 4? explain how you know. \\(\bigcirc\\) \\(x = 3\\) \\(\bigcirc\\) \\(y = 3x\\) \\(\bigcirc\\) \\(y = 3\\) \\(\bigcirc\\) \\(x + y = 3\\) explain your thinking.
First, analyze each equation:
- $x=3$ is a vertical line where all points have an x-coordinate of 3, y can be any value.
- $y=3x$ is a linear line where y depends on x; y only equals -4 when $x=-\frac{4}{3}$, not for all points with y=-4.
- $y=3$ is a horizontal line where all points have a y-coordinate of 3, not -4.
- $x+y=3$ rearranges to $y=-x+3$, a linear line where y only equals -4 when $x=7$, not for all points with y=-4.
Wait, none of the given options correctly represent all points with y-coordinate -4 (the correct equation would be $y=-4$). However, if we re-evaluate the intent: the question asks for the equation that most logically relates to defining a constant coordinate. The only horizontal line (which defines a constant y-value) is $y=3$, which follows the structure for a constant y-coordinate line, just with the wrong constant. All other options are either vertical lines or lines with variable y based on x, which cannot represent a fixed y-coordinate of -4 at all.
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None of the provided equations correctly represent all points with y-coordinate -4. The correct equation for this set of points would be $y=-4$. Among the given options, $y=3$ is the only one that follows the structure of a horizontal line (which defines all points with a constant y-value), even though it uses the wrong constant. All other options either define a vertical line, a line with y dependent on x, so they cannot represent a fixed y-coordinate of -4.