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2.5 Parallel and Perpendicular Practice PDF

The document provides examples of finding the slope of lines parallel and perpendicular to given lines, writing equations of lines in point-slope and slope-intercept form, and solving related problems. It contains 32 examples of finding slopes and writing equations of lines parallel or perpendicular to given lines, along with their step-by-step solutions.

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Huzaifa Zahri
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views3 pages

2.5 Parallel and Perpendicular Practice PDF

The document provides examples of finding the slope of lines parallel and perpendicular to given lines, writing equations of lines in point-slope and slope-intercept form, and solving related problems. It contains 32 examples of finding slopes and writing equations of lines parallel or perpendicular to given lines, along with their step-by-step solutions.

Uploaded by

Huzaifa Zahri
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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2.

5 Practice - Parallel and Perpendicular Lines

Find the slope of a line parallel to each given line.

1) y = 2x + 4 2
2) y = − 3 x + 5
3) y = 4x − 5 4) y = −
10
x−5
3

5) x − y = 4 6) 6x − 5y = 20
7) 7x + y = − 2 8) 3x + 4y = − 8

Find the slope of a line perpendicular to each given line.

9) x = 3 1
10) y = − 2 x − 1
1
11) y = − 3 x 4
12) y = 5 x
13) x − 3y = − 6 14) 3x − y = − 3
15) x + 2y = 8 16) 8x − 3y = − 9

Write the point-slope form of the equation of the line described.

17) through: (2, 5), parallel to x = 0


7
18) through: (5, 2), parallel to y = 5 x + 4
9
19) through: (3, 4), parallel to y = 2 x − 5
3
20) through: (1, − 1), parallel to y = − 4 x + 3
7
21) through: (2, 3), parallel to y = 5 x + 4

22) through: ( − 1, 3), parallel to y = − 3x − 1

23) through: (4, 2), parallel to x = 0


7
24) through: (1, 4), parallel to y = 5 x + 2

25) through: (1, − 5), perpendicular to − x + y = 1

26) through: (1, − 2), perpendicular to − x + 2y = 2

27) through: (5, 2), perpendicular to 5x + y = − 3

Source: http://www.wallace.ccfaculty.org/book/book.html
Saylor Course: http://www.saylor.org/courses/ma001/
28) through: (1, 3), perpendicular to − x + y = 1

29) through: (4, 2), perpendicular to − 4x + y = 0

30) through: ( − 3, − 5), perpendicular to 3x + 7y = 0

31) through: (2, − 2) perpendicular to 3y − x = 0

32) through: ( − 2, 5). perpendicular to y − 2x = 0

Write the slope-intercept form of the equation of the line described.

33) through: (4, − 3), parallel to y = − 2x


3
34) through: ( − 5, 2), parallel to y = 5 x
4
35) through: ( − 3, 1), parallel to y = − 3 x − 1
5
36) through: ( − 4, 0), parallel to y = − 4 x + 4
1
37) through: ( − 4, − 1), parallel to y = − 2 x + 1
5
38) through: (2, 3), parallel to y = 2 x − 1
1
39) through: ( − 2, − 1), parallel to y = − 2 x − 2
3
40) through: ( − 5, − 4), parallel to y = 5 x − 2

41) through: (4, 3), perpendicular to x + y = − 1

42) through: ( − 3, − 5), perpendicular to x + 2y = − 4

43) through: (5, 2), perpendicular to x = 0

44) through: (5, − 1), perpendicular to − 5x + 2y = 10

45) through: ( − 2, 5), perpendicular to − x + y = − 2

46) through: (2, − 3), perpendicular to − 2x + 5y = − 10

47) through: (4, − 3), perpendicular to − x + 2y = − 6

48) through: ( − 4, 1), perpendicular to 4x + 3y = − 9

Beginning and Intermediate Algebra by Tyler Wallace is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution 3.0 Unported License. (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)

Source: http://www.wallace.ccfaculty.org/book/book.html
Saylor Course: http://www.saylor.org/courses/ma001/
2.5

Answers - Parallel and Perpendicular Lines


1) 2 7 3
18) y − 2 = 5 (x − 5) 34) y = 5 x + 5
2
2) − 3 9 4
19) y − 4 = 2 (x − 3) 35) y = − 3 x − 3
3) 4 3
20) y + 1 = − 4 (x − 1) 5
36) y = − 4 x − 5
10
4) − 3 7
21) y − 3 = 5 (x − 2) 1
37) y = − 2 x − 3
5) 1
6 22) y − 3 = − 3(x + 1) 5
6) 5
38) y = 2 x − 2
23) x = 4
7) − 7 7
1
39) y = − 2 x − 2
24) y − 4 = 5 (x − 1)
3
8) − 4 3
25) y + 5 = − (x − 1) 40) y = 5 x − 1
9) 0
26) y + 2 = − 2(x − 1) 41) y = x − 1
10) 2
1
27) y − 2 = 5 (x − 5) 42) y = 2x + 1
11) 3
5 28) y − 3 = − (x − 1) 43) y = 2
12) − 4
1 2
29) y − 2 = − 4 (x − 4) 44) y = − 5 x + 1
13) − 3
1 7
30) y + 5 = 3 (x + 3) 45) y = − x + 3
14) − 3
5
15) 2 31) y + 2 = − 3(x − 2) 46) y = − 2 x + 2

16) − 8
3 1
32) y − 5 = − 2 (x + 2) 47) y = − 2x + 5
3
17) x = 2 33) y = − 2x + 5 48) y = 4 x + 4

Beginning and Intermediate Algebra by Tyler Wallace is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution 3.0 Unported License. (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)

Source: http://www.wallace.ccfaculty.org/book/book.html
Saylor Course: http://www.saylor.org/courses/ma001/

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