How do you graph y>=-1 and x>=3?

1 Answer
Jun 15, 2018

They are both lines on the coordinate plane. Their intersection is the area common to both of them.

Explanation:

Because they both include the variable, the drawn lines will be solid.
y >= -1 is a line at y = -1 and the area shaded to the top.

x >= 3 is a line at x = 3 and the area shaded to the right.

The intersection is the lines from the point (3,-1) up and to the right, and the area shaded between them.