How do you graph the inequality #y>=- 4 #? Algebra Linear Inequalities and Absolute Value Multi-Step Inequalities 1 Answer Bill Jorgensen May 30, 2018 #y>=-4# Explanation: #y=-4# is a horizontal line at -4, since #y>=-4# the area above -4 will be shaded and the line will be solid since it is greater than AND equal to: graph{y>=-4 [-10, 10, -5, 5]} Answer link Related questions How do you solve multi step inequalities? What is the difference between solving multi step equations and multi step inequalities? How do you solve multi step inequalities with variables on both sides? How do you solve for x given #x-5>x+6 #? What do you do when your variable cancels out? How do you solve for x when you have #4x-2(3x-9) \le -4(2x-9)#? How do you graph #\frac{5x-1}{4} > -2 (x+5)#? How do you solve for x in #4-6x \le 2(2x+3)#? How do you solve -3x+4<-8#? Which of these values of x satisfies the inequality #-7x+6≤ -8#? See all questions in Multi-Step Inequalities Impact of this question 12669 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License