The Youth's Assistant in Theoretic and Practical Arithmetic: Designed for the Use of Schools in the United States |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 33
Page 1
... four , four and one , five , five and one , six , six and one , seven , seven and one , eight , eight and one , nine , nine and one , ten ; and in this way we might go on to any extent , forming collections of units by the continual ...
... four , four and one , five , five and one , six , six and one , seven , seven and one , eight , eight and one , nine , nine and one , ten ; and in this way we might go on to any extent , forming collections of units by the continual ...
Page 2
... four , 5 five , 6 six , 7 seven , 8 eight , 9 nine . The above characters , taken one at a time , denote all the numbers from zero to nine inclusive , and are called simple units . To denote numbers larger than nine , two or more of ...
... four , 5 five , 6 six , 7 seven , 8 eight , 9 nine . The above characters , taken one at a time , denote all the numbers from zero to nine inclusive , and are called simple units . To denote numbers larger than nine , two or more of ...
Page 3
... four quadrillions , three hundred seventy - eight trillions , four hun- dred sixty - four billions , nine hundred seventy - four millions , three hundred one thousand , two hundred thirty - two . 75. In reading very large numbers it is ...
... four quadrillions , three hundred seventy - eight trillions , four hun- dred sixty - four billions , nine hundred seventy - four millions , three hundred one thousand , two hundred thirty - two . 75. In reading very large numbers it is ...
Page 4
... four hundred eleven millions , and so on . 76. The foregoing is according to the French numeration , which , on ... four hundred and seven . Thir- ty thousand fifty nine . Seven millions . Sixty - four billions . One hundred nine ...
... four hundred eleven millions , and so on . 76. The foregoing is according to the French numeration , which , on ... four hundred and seven . Thir- ty thousand fifty nine . Seven millions . Sixty - four billions . One hundred nine ...
Page 5
... four times , ( 7 ) . In this way he must proceed , till , by practice , the results arising from the addition of small numbers are committed to memory ; and then he will be able to answer the ques- 1 tions which involve such additions ...
... four times , ( 7 ) . In this way he must proceed , till , by practice , the results arising from the addition of small numbers are committed to memory ; and then he will be able to answer the ques- 1 tions which involve such additions ...
Common terms and phrases
acc't acres Addition amount ANALYSIS answer bush bushels called cash in full ciphers circumference column common denominator common difference compound interest contains cost cube root cubic decimal denoted diameter divide dividend division dollars dolls DRY MEASURE equal expressed factors Federal Money feet long foot gain gallon given number given to find greatest common divisor Hence hundred hundredths inches last term least common multiple left hand leger lemons length man's share measure merator method miles minuend mixed number months multiplicand multiply number of terms payment pence pound present worth principal proportion quantity quarts QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE quotient ratio Reduce remainder right hand rods RULE RULE.-Divide RULE.-Multiply shillings side Simon Pond simple square root subtract subtrahend supposed tens tenths tion Troy weight units velocity vulgar fraction weight whole number write
Popular passages
Page 76 - Multiply each payment by its term of credit, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the payments ; the quotient will be the average term of credit.
Page 109 - Multiply the divisor, thus augmented, by the last figure of the root, and subtract the product from the dividend, and to the remainder bring down the next period for a new dividend.
Page 97 - Multiply all the numerators together for a new numerator, and all the denominators together for a new denominator.
Page 74 - Is when the several shares of stock are continued in trade an equal term of time. RULE. As the whole stock is to the whole gain or loss : so is each man's particular stock, to his particular share of the gain or loss.
Page 105 - Subtract the square number from the left hand period, and to the remainder bring down the next period for a dividend. III. Double the root already found for a divisor ; seek how many times the divisor is contained in the dividend...
Page 67 - In any proportion, the product of the means is equal to the product of the extremes.
Page 68 - Then multiply the second and third terms together, and divide the product by the first term: the quotient will be the fourth term, or answer.
Page 120 - RULE. Multiply all the terms of the natural series of numbers, from 1 up to the given number, continually together, and the last product will be the answer required. ExAMPLEs.
Page 89 - Divide the greater number by the less, and that divisor by the remainder, and so on, always dividing the last divisor by the last remainder, till nothing remain.