Answer:
The third graph
Step-by-step explanation:
What the translation is saying is that for each value of f(x) = |x|, the graph is translated 4 units in the negative x direction and 3 units for the positive y direction. Another way to say this is that for each f(x), we can add (-4) (or subtract 4) to its x value and add 3 to its y value.
One way to find which graph works is to take a point, figure out where it should be, and work from there.
One example of this is (-1,1). If x=-1, |x| is 1, so in the original graph, our point is (-1, 1). In our translated graph, we need to subtract 4 from the x component (the first number, which is -1 in this case) and add 3 to the y component (the second number, or 1 in this case). Our new point comes to
(-1-4 , 1+3)
= (-5, 4)
Therefore, one point on the resulting graph is (-5, 4). We can look through each graph and see if it has the point.
Looking at each graph, it is clear that the graph in the bottom left, or the third graph, contains the point.