Which equation does the graph below represent?
y = 1/4 + x
y = 1/4x
y = 4 + x
y = 4x

Answer:
y = 4x
Step-by-step explanation:
If you look at the graph, it is crossing the y-axis at the origin of (0, 0). This means that the y-intercept (or the "b" in your equation of y = mx + b) will be zero. Since it is a zero, it would not need to be in the equation.
So, right now we have y = mx + 0, which would simply be just y = mx.
Next, remember that the "m" in this equation represents the slope. To find the slope on a graph, it is calculated by rise over run. If you look at your graph, starting at the origin, the rise is going up 4 units and the run is over by 1. This makes your slope (or your "m" value) the fraction of 4 over 1 (4/1).
This slope can simply be written as 4 because we know that anything over 1 is just equal to the numerator value.
So, this makes the equation for this line in slope intercept form as the following:
y = mx + b
y = (4/1)x + 0
y = 4x
Answer:
[tex]\boxed{y=4x}[/tex]
Step-by-step explanation:
First, lets see where the line crosses the y-axis at, the line crosses the y-axis at (0, 0), the y-intercept is 0.
We can use slope-intercept form of the equation to solve.
y = mx + b
m = slope
b = y-intercept
We know b = 0
y = mx + 0
y = mx
We need to find the slope.
slope = rise/run
Take two points: (0, 0) and (1, 4)
m = (4 - 0)/(1 - 0)
m = 4/1
m = 4
The slope of the line is 4.
y = (4)x
y = 4x