How do you find the slope of 2x+3y−3=0? Algebra Graphs of Linear Equations and Functions Slope-Intercept Form 1 Answer Barry H. Mar 2, 2018 −23 Explanation: Rearranging 2x+3y−3=0 we get y=23[x]+1 and this is in slope intercept form , where the slope is −23 [ie, the coefficient ofx] and the [1] is the intercept value on the y axis Answer link Related questions What is Slope-Intercept Form? How do you find the "m" and "b" of any linear equation? How do you determine the slope and y intercept when given a graph? Why is slope "rise over run"? How do you find the slope and y intercept of 2x+5=y? What is the slope and y intercept of y=x? What is the slope and y intercept of y=3.75? How do you write 7+35x=y in slope intercept form? How do you write −5x+12=20 in slope intercept form? How do you write an equation in standard form for a line that goes through (5, –2) and (–5, 4)? See all questions in Slope-Intercept Form Impact of this question 6334 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License