Graph theory first arose in 1736 when Euler developed the basic concepts solving the Bridges of Konigsberg problem. Many modern areas of graph theory are unified in the study of graph homomorphisms; a homomorphism is a function from the vertices of a source graph to the vertices of a target graph such that the images of adjacent vertices being adjacent. Sidorenko\u27s Conjecture, about the minimum number of homomorphisms from a bipartite graph to any graph with a fixed number of vertices and edges, is the core inspiration for our investigation. We expand on the approach of Csikvari and Lin showing several classes of target graphs for which the lower bound of Sidorenko\u27s Conjecture is met for any bipartite source graph. We then turn to th...