How do you determine the slope of the line (3/4,-2) and (1/4,-3)? Algebra Graphs of Linear Equations and Functions Slope 1 Answer George C. May 18, 2015 The slope is (change in #y#) / (change in #x#). The change in #y# is the difference of the #y# coordinates and the change in #x# is the difference of the #x# coordinates: slope #= (Delta y)/(Delta x) = (-3 - (-2))/(1/4 - 3/4)# #= (-3+2)/((1-3)/4) = (-1)/(-2/4) = (-1)/(-1/2) = 2# Answer link Related questions What is Slope? How can slope be undefined? How do you calculate slope from a graph? How do you calculate the slope given two points? How does a positive slope differ from a negative slope? How does change in the slope affect the steepness of a line? Why is the slope of a horizontal line is zero? How do you determine the slope of #(3, –5)# and #(–2, 9)#? How do you determine the slope of #(1/3, 3/4)# and #(–2, 6)#? How do you determine the slope of #(2,7)# and #(7,2)#? See all questions in Slope Impact of this question 1368 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License