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Linear function A and linear function B both have the same input values as shown below. Why will the output values for linear function A always be different than the corresponding output values for linear function B? 2 tables. A 2-column table with 5 rows titled Linear Function A. Column 1 is labeled x with entries 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. Column 2 is labeled y with entries 3, 7, 11, 15, 19. A 2-column table titled Linear Function B. Column 1 is labeled x with entries 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. Column 2 is labeled y with entries 4, 8, 12, 16, 20. The initial values of the two functions are different, and the rates of change of the two functions are also different. The initial values of the two functions are different, and the rates of change of the two functions are the same. The initial values of the two functions are the same, and the rates of change of the two functions are different. The initial values of the two functions are the same, and the rates of change of the two functions are also the same.

2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

the other dude was backwards

Explanation:

the answer is B) The initial values are different and the change is the same

hope this helps!

answered
User Dwight Guth
by
8.3k points
4 votes

Although the input values are the same, the output values are different.

The answer is:

The initial values of the two functions are the same, and the rates of change of the two functions are different.

answered
User Fuzzysearch
by
8.6k points

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