The Illustrative Practical Arithmetic ...Brewer and Tileston, 1873 - Arithmetic |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 28
Page 24
... apple with one pebble , have I two pebbles ? Have I two apples ? Objects counted together must be of the same kind . * 44. The process of counting together numbers of the same kind is Addition . 1 What is addition ? 45. The number found ...
... apple with one pebble , have I two pebbles ? Have I two apples ? Objects counted together must be of the same kind . * 44. The process of counting together numbers of the same kind is Addition . 1 What is addition ? 45. The number found ...
Page 27
... . 52. 3628 + 3 + 6 + 7 + 9 + 4 = how many ? Ans . 75 . 53. 48 + 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 = how many ? 54. 5598 + 7 + 6 + 5 + 4 + 3 = how many ? 51. ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE I. John gathered 42 apples under one ARTS . 47-50 . ] 27 ADDITION .
... . 52. 3628 + 3 + 6 + 7 + 9 + 4 = how many ? Ans . 75 . 53. 48 + 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 = how many ? 54. 5598 + 7 + 6 + 5 + 4 + 3 = how many ? 51. ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE I. John gathered 42 apples under one ARTS . 47-50 . ] 27 ADDITION .
Page 28
... apples did he gather ? Tens . Units . OPERATION EXPRESSED AND EXPLAINED . 4 2 apples . 3 5 12 " " 8 9 apples . To find how many he gathered , we add the numbers 42 , 35 , and 12 . We express these numbers so that units of the same order ...
... apples did he gather ? Tens . Units . OPERATION EXPRESSED AND EXPLAINED . 4 2 apples . 3 5 12 " " 8 9 apples . To find how many he gathered , we add the numbers 42 , 35 , and 12 . We express these numbers so that units of the same order ...
Page 32
... apples , and give 8 of them away , how many remain ? How many re- main if you give away 2 ? 4 ? 9 ? 5 ? 3 ? 6 ? 7 ? 2. If there are 12 pears and you take away 5 of them , how many pears remain ? How many remain if you take away 9 ? 7 ...
... apples , and give 8 of them away , how many remain ? How many re- main if you give away 2 ? 4 ? 9 ? 5 ? 3 ? 6 ? 7 ? 2. If there are 12 pears and you take away 5 of them , how many pears remain ? How many remain if you take away 9 ? 7 ...
Page 33
... apples and Mary has 3 , how many more apples has Henry than Mary ? We may find how many more Henry has by taking away a number of his apples equal to Mary's . 3 of Henry's apples taken leaves 2 . We see , then , that Henry has 2 apples ...
... apples and Mary has 3 , how many more apples has Henry than Mary ? We may find how many more Henry has by taking away a number of his apples equal to Mary's . 3 of Henry's apples taken leaves 2 . We see , then , that Henry has 2 apples ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acres amount apples average date barrel bought bushels called Change contains cord cost cube root decimal decimeter denominator derive the following diameter Dictation Exercises dimes divided dividend division divisor dollars Dry Measure equal Explanation fractional number frustum gain greatest common factor hence hundred ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE inches integral number least common multiple length long ton Manual and Key March 9 measure meter metric system miles mills minuend months multiplicand multiplier NOTE number expressed number of units OPERATION orders of units ounces paid payment pecks pounds premium prime factors principal pupil quarts quotient rate per cent ratio receive remain rods sell slant height sold solid square root subtraction subtrahend surface tens thousand triangle units of higher weight wide write a figure yards of cloth zeros
Popular passages
Page 167 - DRY MEASURE 2 pints (pt.) = 1 quart (qt.) 8 quarts =1 peck (pk.) 4 pecks = 1 bushel (bu...
Page 125 - Reduce the fractions to a common denominator and divide the numerator of the dividend by the numerator of the divisor.
Page 168 - The circumference of a circle is supposed to be divided into 360 equal parts, called degrees; each degree into 60 minutes, and each minute into 60 seconds. Degrees, minutes, and seconds are designated by the characters °, ', ". Thus 23° 14' 35" is read 23 degrees, 14 minutes, and 35 seconds.
Page 160 - Square Measure 144 square inches (sq. in.) = 1 square foot (sq. ft.) 9 square feet = 1 square yard (sq. yd.) 30| square yards — 1 square rod (sq. rd.) 160 square rods = 1 acre (A.) 640 acres = 1 square mile (sq.
Page 155 - Troy weight are weighed gold,* silver, jewels, and all iquors. The denominations are pounds, ounces, pennyweights, and grains. TABLE. 24 grains (grs.) make 1 pennyweight, marked pwt. 20 pennyweights - - 1 ounce, ----- oz. 12 ounces - - - - 1 pound, ----- lb.
Page 166 - TABLE. 4 gills (gi.) - make - - 1 pint, marked pt. 2 pints ------- 1 quart, - - - qt. 4 quarts ------ 1 gallon, - - - gal. 31£ gallons ------ 1 barrel, - - - bar.
Page 174 - NUMBERS. 12 units = 1 dozen. 12 dozen = 1 gross. 12 gross = 1 great gross. 20 units = 1 score.
Page 67 - TABLE. 10 Mills (m.) = 1 Cent . . ct. 10 Cents = 1 Dime . . d. 10 Dimes = 1 Dollar . $. 10 Dollars = 1 Eagle . E.
Page 153 - Rule. — Multiply the number of the highest denomination given by the number required of the next lower denomination to make one of that higher, and to the product add the number, if any, of the lower denomination. Proceed in like manner till the whole is reduced to the required denomination.
Page 237 - RULE. — Divide the given sum by the amount of $ 1 for the given time and rate, and the quotient will be the PRESENT WORTH.