A Practical and Theoretical System of Arithmetic: Containing a New System of Proportion : with Theoretical Explanations of All the Principal Rules |
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Page 6
... period is read precisely alike , except that a dif- ferent name is added at the end of each . I. To read numbers , therefore : RULE . Beginning at the right , divide them into periods of three figures , and then read from the left each ...
... period is read precisely alike , except that a dif- ferent name is added at the end of each . I. To read numbers , therefore : RULE . Beginning at the right , divide them into periods of three figures , and then read from the left each ...
Page 7
... periods , placing each period in its proper order ; taking care to sup- ply by ciphers , those periods and places , that are omitted . in the question . If , for example , the number to be written , be ninety bil- lions , four hundred ...
... periods , placing each period in its proper order ; taking care to sup- ply by ciphers , those periods and places , that are omitted . in the question . If , for example , the number to be written , be ninety bil- lions , four hundred ...
Page 90
... periods of time , that there is between the quantities consumed . 40 is 40 of 8. 40 of 2 = 2X5 = 10 weeks , Ans . 8 12. If 4 tons of hay will feed 3 cattle over the winter , how many tons will feed 25 cattle ? 25 cattle will consume 25 ...
... periods of time , that there is between the quantities consumed . 40 is 40 of 8. 40 of 2 = 2X5 = 10 weeks , Ans . 8 12. If 4 tons of hay will feed 3 cattle over the winter , how many tons will feed 25 cattle ? 25 cattle will consume 25 ...
Page 124
... period when the payments taken together ← xceed the interest due , and then the surplus is to be applied oward discharging the principal ; and interest is to be com- uted on the balance , as aforesaid . " RULE . Compute the interest to ...
... period when the payments taken together ← xceed the interest due , and then the surplus is to be applied oward discharging the principal ; and interest is to be com- uted on the balance , as aforesaid . " RULE . Compute the interest to ...
Page 126
... INTEREST . When interest payable at stated periods is forborne ; or a debt remains unpaid after it falls due , it is equitable to require interest upon interest . RULE . Compute the interest up to the time that 126 INTEREST .
... INTEREST . When interest payable at stated periods is forborne ; or a debt remains unpaid after it falls due , it is equitable to require interest upon interest . RULE . Compute the interest up to the time that 126 INTEREST .
Other editions - View all
A Practical and Theoretical System of Arithmetic: Containing Several New ... George Willson No preview available - 2016 |
A Practical and Theoretical System of Arithmetic: Containing a New System of ... George Willson No preview available - 2016 |
Practical and Theoretical System of Arithmetic: Containing a New System of ... George Willson No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
acres amount angles annuity annum barrels bought bushels bushels of oats bushels of wheat cents a bushel ciphers compound interest Compound Numbers contain cube root cubic currency decimal point denote diameter divide the product dividend division divisor dollars equal example Federal Money feet long Find the interest gallons given number hand figures hours a day hypotenuse improper fraction inches integer least common multiple length less lowest terms method miles mills minuend mixed number months multiplicand Multiply number of terms paid payment perpendicular piece pound principal quantity question quotient ratio Reduce remainder Required the interest rhombus right-angled rods Rule of Three RULE.-Multiply separatrix share shillings sides simple solid square root statement subtract third term tion triangle Troy Weight units vulgar fraction weight whole number yards cost yards of cloth
Popular passages
Page 164 - Divide the difference of the extremes by the common difference, and the quotient increased by 1 is the number of terns. EXAMPLES. 1. If the extremes be 3 and 45, and the common difference 2 ; what is the number of terms 1 Ans.
Page 62 - Multiplying or dividing both terms of a fraction by the same number does not change its value.
Page 164 - PROBLEM II. The first term, the last term, and the number of terms given, to find the common difference. RULE. — Divide the difference of the extremes by the number of terms less 1 , and the quotient will be the common diffcrenct.
Page 105 - If 8 men can build a wall 20 feet long, 6 feet high and 4 feet thick, in 12 days ; in what time...
Page 174 - To find the area of a trapezoid. RULE. Multiply half the sum of the two parallel sides by the perpendicular distance between them : the product will be the area.
Page 51 - When the numerator is less than the denominator, the value of the fraction is less than 1.
Page 55 - ... thing remains, multiply it by the next inferior denomination, and divide by the denominator as before, and so on as far as necessary, and the quotient will be the answer.
Page 124 - The rule for casting interest, when partial payments have been made, is to apply the payment, in the first place, to the discharge of the interest then due. If the payment exceeds the interest, the surplus goes towards discharging the principal, and the subsequent interest is to be computed on the balance of principal remaining due.
Page 53 - 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 102 - The fourth term is found by multiplying the second and third terms together and dividing by the first § 14O.