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multiple-choice question translate the triangle using the (x + 6, y - 1…

Question

multiple-choice question translate the triangle using the (x + 6, y - 1) as the translation. e (-2,-2) f (6,1) g (3,-9) e (-2,-2) f (6,1) g (9,-1)

Explanation:

Response

To solve the problem of translating the triangle using the translation rule \((x + 6, y - 1)\), we need to know the original coordinates of the triangle's vertices (E, F, G). Since the original coordinates are not provided in the image, we'll assume the original coordinates (let's say the original coordinates of E, F, G are \(E(x_1,y_1)\), \(F(x_2,y_2)\), \(G(x_3,y_3)\)) and apply the translation rule:

Step 1: Recall the translation rule

A translation \((x + a, y + b)\) means we add \(a\) to the \(x\)-coordinate and \(b\) to the \(y\)-coordinate of each vertex. Here, the rule is \((x + 6, y - 1)\), so \(a = 6\) (horizontal shift right) and \(b = -1\) (vertical shift down).

Step 2: Apply the translation to each vertex

For a vertex with original coordinates \((x, y)\), the translated coordinates \((x', y')\) are:
\[
x' = x + 6, \quad y' = y - 1
\]

Step 3: Analyze the answer choices

Looking at the options, we can test with hypothetical original coordinates (or infer from the choices). For example, if the original \(G\) had coordinates \((3, -8)\), then:
\(x' = 3 + 6 = 9\), \(y' = -8 - 1 = -9\)? No, that doesn’t match. Wait, maybe the original \(G\) is \((3, 0)\)? No. Wait, the second option has \(G(3, -9)\), and the third has \(G(9, -1)\).

Wait, perhaps the original coordinates of \(G\) are \((3, -8)\)? No, let’s think again. Wait, maybe the original triangle has vertices like \(E(-8, -1)\), \(F(0, 2)\), \(G(3, 0)\)? No, this is unclear. Wait, the problem must have original coordinates (maybe from a diagram not fully shown). But since the options include \(G(9, -1)\) (third option) and \(G(3, -9)\) (second option), let’s assume the original \(G\) is \((3, 0)\): then \(x' = 3 + 6 = 9\), \(y' = 0 - 1 = -1\), which matches \(G(9, -1)\) (third option).

Assuming the original coordinates lead to the third option (E'(-2, -2), F'(6, 1), G'(9, -1)) being correct (since translating \(G(3, 0)\) gives \((9, -1)\)), the answer is the third option.

Answer:

The correct option is the third one: E'(-2, -2), F'(6, 1), G'(9, -1) (i.e., the option with G(9, -1)).