How do you find the x and y intercept of y = - 6x - 6? Algebra Graphs of Linear Equations and Functions Intercepts by Substitution 1 Answer Binayaka C. Apr 9, 2017 x-intercept is at (-1,0) y-intercept is at (0,-6) Explanation: y = -6x -6 . Putting x=0 in the equation we get y-intercept as y=-6*0-6 = -6 :. y-intercept is at (0,-6) Putting y=0 in the equation we get x-intercept as 0=-6*x-6 :.x = -6/6= -1:. x-intercept is at (-1,0) graph{-6x-6 [-20, 20, -10, 10]} [Ans] Answer link Related questions What is the x and y Intercepts? How many intercepts can a line have? How do you use substitution to find intercepts? How do you identify the intercepts on a linear graph? How do you use the x and y intercepts to graph a linear equation? How do you find the x and y intercept for y=2x+3? How do you find the x intercept for y=2? What is the y intercept for the y=2 graph? What is the y intercept for x=-1? How do you find the intercepts of x^2y-x^2+4y=0? See all questions in Intercepts by Substitution Impact of this question 3597 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License