- [Instructor] We're told the system of linear equations below is graphed on the coordinate grid. Okay, we see that. Then, it says: What is the value of y equals -x - 7 when x is equal to -8. So the graph y equals -x - 7, that's this blue line here, and they tell us, right? That the point -8, 1 is on that line. So when x is equal to -8, y is equal to 1. So we could type that in. And then, they ask us: What is the y-value of the bronze line or the brown line here, y is equal to 1/2x - 1 when x is equal to -8. So we don't even have to compute it. We see when x is equal to -8, we get y is equal to -5, so we put -5 there. And then, they say: Is x equal -8 a solution? Well, the only way that x equals -8 would be a solution is if the y value of those lines when x equals -8 were the same, but they're clearly not. And in fact, we would see it visually. If it was a solution, the two lines would intersect at that point but they don't. There's actually two different points here. They don't overlap. So this is not a solution and we're done.