6. One business charges $12 per t-shirt custom made.

Another business charges $11 per t-shirt plus a $20 set up fee for custom made.

If you were to graph both of these scenarios on the coordinate plane, the first graph would be proportional and the second non proportional.

How would you transform the first graph to make it become a non proportional graph with the same y-intercept as the second graph?

(1 point)
Responses

Right 1
Right 1

Up 1
Up 1

Right 20
Right 20

Left 1
Left 1

Left 20
Left 20

Up 20

Up 20

To transform the first graph to make it become a non-proportional graph with the same y-intercept as the second graph, you would move the graph up by 20 units. This means you would go up 20 units for every x-value on the graph.

To transform the first graph to make it become a non-proportional graph with the same y-intercept as the second graph, you would need to apply two transformations: shifting it horizontally (right or left) and shifting it vertically (up or down).

First, you need to shift the graph horizontally to match the y-intercept of the second graph. Since the y-intercept of the second graph represents the $20 set up fee, you would need to shift the first graph to the right by 20 units.

Next, you need to shift the graph vertically to match the overall rate of the second graph. Since the second graph charges $11 per t-shirt, you would need to shift the first graph upwards by 11 units.

So, the correct transformations to transform the first graph are:
- Shift the graph right by 20 units.
- Shift the graph up by 11 units.

Note: The directions given in the question (Right 1, Up 1, etc.) do not match the values mentioned ($20 set up fee, $11 per t-shirt). Therefore, those directions are not applicable to this specific scenario.