Algebra Support Final Part 1

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Across
  1. 3. A straight line that best represents the relationship between two variables plotted on a scatter plot.
  2. 4. The asymmetry or distortion of a distribution, specifically how the data is distributed around its center.
  3. 7. A relationship where one variable's change directly results from the change in another variable.
  4. 10. 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81, 100, 121, 144, 169, etc. The resulting number when you multiply a number times itself. EX: 4 X 4 = 16
  5. 13. An imaginary straight line that divides a shape into two identical parts, thereby creating one part as the mirror image of the other part.
  6. 14. Element in a sum, difference, or sequence.
  7. 17. a line that a given curve continually approaches but does not meet
  8. 19. In an equation or inequality, a number that can be substituted for the variable to make that equation or inequality true.
Down
  1. 1. The square root of a number π‘₯, is a number, 𝑦 such that 𝑦2 = π‘₯; in other words, the square root of a number is a number whose square is 𝑦 βˆ™ 𝑦.
  2. 2. Describes how a function behaves as its input approaches positive or negative infinity.
  3. 4. A graph in the coordinate plane representing a set of bivariate data
  4. 5. A letter or number representing a numerical quantity that multiplies a term.
  5. 6. The values of x where an expression is zero. These are the x-coordinates of the x-intercepts of the expression’s graph. For a polynomial expression, these are usually called roots.
  6. 8. The point where a parabola crosses its axis of symmetry, or an end of a side of a polygon, or the corner point of an angle.
  7. 9. A data point that does not fit in with the rest of the data. Defined as Q3+1.5xIQR or Q1-1.5xIQR.
  8. 11. A measure of variation in a set of numerical data, the interquartile range is the distance between the first and third quartiles of the data set.
  9. 12. A point on a 2-dimensional plane is described by a pair (x,y). The coordinate x is given by the labels below the grid, and the coordinate y is given by the labels to the left of the grid.
  10. 15. The highest point of a parabola.
  11. 16. The lowest point on a parabola.
  12. 18. The set of input values for which the function is defined.