Answer:
B. A linear graph of solid line intercepts X-axis at the point (2, 0) and Y-axis at the point (0, -4)
Explanation:
The boundary line of an inequality is graphed as though the expression were an equality. The nature of the line used will depend on the nature of the inequality.
Form of the line
When the inequality includes the "or equal to" case (≤ or ≥), the boundary line is part of the solution set. It is drawn as a solid line.
When the inequality excludes the "or equal to" case (< or >), the boundary line is not part of the solution set. It is drawn as a dotted or dashed line.
The given inequality
y ≤ 2x -4
includes the "or equal to" case, so the boundary line is solid.
Y-intercept
The equation of the boundary line is written in slope-intercept form:
y = mx +b . . . . . . . line with slope m and y-intercept b
y = 2x -4 . . . . . . . boundary line with slope 2 and y-intercept -4.
This tells you that the boundary line intercepts the y-axis at the point (0, -4).