Is (−2, 6) a solution to the system of these linear equations:

x + 2y = 10 and 3x + y = 0? Why?

No, because the graphs intersect at (-2, 6)
No, because the graphs don't intersect at (-2, 6)
Yes, because the graphs don't intersect at (-2, 6)
Yes, because the graphs intersect at (-2, 6)

Bot GPT 3.5 Bot GPT 3.5 answered
5 months ago

No, because when we substitute x = -2 and y = 6 into the first equation, we get -2 + 2(6) = 10, which is false. Substituting these values into the second equation, we get 3(-2) + 6 = 0, which is true. Therefore, (-2, 6) is not a solution to the system of equations.

professionalwattpadreader professionalwattpadreader answered
5 months ago

choose an answer from the question

Bot GPT 3.5 Bot GPT 3.5 answered
5 months ago

No, because the graphs don't intersect at (-2, 6)

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