A brief compendium of arithmetic1835 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 6
Page
... compound interest is given , and another for the valuation of annuities for ages between 51 and 80. Duodecimals complete the business of the three kinds of fractions usually taught . Involution , with a table of Powers , and Evolution ...
... compound interest is given , and another for the valuation of annuities for ages between 51 and 80. Duodecimals complete the business of the three kinds of fractions usually taught . Involution , with a table of Powers , and Evolution ...
Page 48
... Interest , and add them together . What is the Interest of £ 625 for one year and nine months at 5 per cent . per annum ? A. £ 54 13s . 9d . What is the ... COMPOUND INTEREST . COMPOUND INTEREST is Interest on Interest , 48 SIMPLE INTEREST .
... Interest , and add them together . What is the Interest of £ 625 for one year and nine months at 5 per cent . per annum ? A. £ 54 13s . 9d . What is the ... COMPOUND INTEREST . COMPOUND INTEREST is Interest on Interest , 48 SIMPLE INTEREST .
Page 49
Benjamin Snowden. COMPOUND INTEREST . COMPOUND INTEREST is Interest on Interest , for the time the Interest remains unpaid . RULE . Having found , by the rule for Simple Inte- rest , the Interest for the first year , add it to the ...
Benjamin Snowden. COMPOUND INTEREST . COMPOUND INTEREST is Interest on Interest , for the time the Interest remains unpaid . RULE . Having found , by the rule for Simple Inte- rest , the Interest for the first year , add it to the ...
Page 71
... COMPOUND INTEREST . The following Table shews the Amount of £ 1 at 5 per cent . Compound Interest , for any number of years not exceeding fifteen : — Yrs . Amounts . Yrs . Amounts . Yrs . Amounts . 1 234 1.05 1.1025 6 1.340095 11 ...
... COMPOUND INTEREST . The following Table shews the Amount of £ 1 at 5 per cent . Compound Interest , for any number of years not exceeding fifteen : — Yrs . Amounts . Yrs . Amounts . Yrs . Amounts . 1 234 1.05 1.1025 6 1.340095 11 ...
Page 86
... Compound Interest ? A. £ 643 4s . 10 d . 976 . 47. What is the present worth of £ 161 10s . , for 19 months , at 5 per cent . ? A. £ 149 13s . Ožd . 48. My uncle aged 65 years , wants to buy an annuity for his life for £ 1050 , what ...
... Compound Interest ? A. £ 643 4s . 10 d . 976 . 47. What is the present worth of £ 161 10s . , for 19 months , at 5 per cent . ? A. £ 149 13s . Ožd . 48. My uncle aged 65 years , wants to buy an annuity for his life for £ 1050 , what ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
2qrs 3qrs 7lbs aliquot ALLIGATION Amount annuity annum APOTHECARIES WEIGHT ARITHMETIC AVOIRDUPOISE WEIGHT Banco BEER MEASURE Bought bushel casks cent ciphers CLOTH MEASURE common denominator compound fractions Compound Interest Copecs crowns decimals Divide dividend DIVISION divisor DRY MEASURE Ducat ells Examples exchange Facit farthings feet find the value gallons Geometrical Progression given number given sum greater grotes guineas hogsheads improper fraction inches integer last rule last term left hand less Marcs miles mille-reis mixed numbers months Mult Multiplicand Multiply Neat weight number of terms Oqrs pence penny piastre pound sterling Prob Problem Proof proper quantity quotient Reduce remainder rix-dollars rouble RULE 2.-When Rule of Three RULE.-Multiply share of gain shil shillings short methods square root subtract Tare Tret TROY WEIGHT Vulgar Fractions wheat whole numbers WINE MEASURE wwwm yards cost
Popular passages
Page 81 - ... and to the remainder bring down the next period for a dividend. 3. Place the double of the root already found, on the left hand of the dividend for a divisor. 4. Seek how often the divisor is contained...
Page 61 - To reduce fractions to a common denominator. RULE. Multiply each numerator into all the denominators except its own for a new numerator, and all the denominators together for a common denominator.
Page 61 - To reduce a mixed number to an improper fraction, — RULE : Multiply the whole number by the denominator of the fraction, to the product add the numerator, and write the result over the denominator.
Page 61 - RULE. Multiply all the numerators together for a new numerator, and all the denominators for a new denominator: then reduce the new fraction to its lowest terms.
Page 86 - Ans. £b 2s. 3. If 100 eggs were placed in a right line, exactly a yard asunder from one another, and the first a yard from a basket, what length of ground does that man go who gathers up these 100 eggs singly, returning with every egg to the basket to put it in I Ans.
Page 51 - RULE. Multiply each payment by the time at which it is due, then divide the sum of the products by the sum of the payments, and the quotient will be the answer.
Page 86 - There is a cellar dug that is 12 feet every way, in length, breadth, and depth; how many solid feet of earth were taken out of it? Ans. 1728. 42. How many bricks 9 inches long and 4 inches wide, will pave a yard that is 20 feet square?
Page 84 - Hence, when we have given the first term, the ratio, and the number of terms, to find the last term, we have this RULE.
Page 81 - 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 30 - As the whole sum of the products is to the whole gain or loss, so is each man's particular product to his particular share of the loss or gain.* EXAMPLES.