The Illustrative Practical Arithmetic by a Natural Method ... |
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Page 14
... lower order may be united and form one unit of a higher order ; thus , Ten units are united and form one ten . Ten tens " " 66 " " one hundred . Ten hundreds " " " " " " " " one thousand . Ten thousands " " " " 66 " " one ten thousand ...
... lower order may be united and form one unit of a higher order ; thus , Ten units are united and form one ten . Ten tens " " 66 " " one hundred . Ten hundreds " " " " " " " " one thousand . Ten thousands " " " " 66 " " one ten thousand ...
Page 66
... lower than the temperature at which water boils ; at what degree of temperature does water boil ? Ans . 212 degrees . 2. 133416 emigrants arrived in New York in 1867 , which was 9731 more than arrived in 1866 ; how many arrived in 1866 ...
... lower than the temperature at which water boils ; at what degree of temperature does water boil ? Ans . 212 degrees . 2. 133416 emigrants arrived in New York in 1867 , which was 9731 more than arrived in 1866 ; how many arrived in 1866 ...
Page 67
... lower order of these units are equal to one of the next higher order . The relative values of these units are as follows : 10 mills ( m . ) = 1 cent , marked ct . 10 cents 10 dimes 10 dollars = 1 dime , = 1 dollar , 66 d . = 1 eagle ...
... lower order of these units are equal to one of the next higher order . The relative values of these units are as follows : 10 mills ( m . ) = 1 cent , marked ct . 10 cents 10 dimes 10 dollars = 1 dime , = 1 dollar , 66 d . = 1 eagle ...
Page 68
... lower orders . 1 cent is equal to how many mills ? 1 dime is equal to how many cents ? how many mills ? 1 dollar is equal to how many dimes ? cents ? mills ? ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE I. In 5 cents how many mills ? 68 [ PART I. INTEGRAL ...
... lower orders . 1 cent is equal to how many mills ? 1 dime is equal to how many cents ? how many mills ? 1 dollar is equal to how many dimes ? cents ? mills ? ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE I. In 5 cents how many mills ? 68 [ PART I. INTEGRAL ...
Page 69
... lower orders , we multiply the given number by the number of units it takes of the lower order to make one unit of the higher order . - NOTE . To express the product of a number multiplied by 10 , 100 , or 1000 , see Art . 79. When the ...
... lower orders , we multiply the given number by the number of units it takes of the lower order to make one unit of the higher order . - NOTE . To express the product of a number multiplied by 10 , 100 , or 1000 , see Art . 79. When the ...
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The Illustrative Practical Arithmetic by a Natural Method: With Dictation ... George Augustus Walton No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
acres amount apples Arithmetic 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 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 percentage pounds premium prime factors principal pupil quarts quotient rate per cent ratio receive remain rods RULE 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 165 - DRY MEASURE 2 pints (pt.) = 1 quart (qt.) 8 quarts =1 peck (pk.) 4 pecks = 1 bushel (bu...
Page 166 - 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 158 - 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 166 - A circle is a plane figure bounded by a line, every part of which is equally distant from : a point within called the centre ; as AEFGBD.
Page 155 - Measure 12 inches (in.) = 1 foot (ft.) 3 feet = 1 yard (yd.) 5$ yards or 16$ feet = 1 rod (rd.) 320 rods or 5280 feet = 1 mile (mi.) Square Measure 144 square inches (sq.
Page 163 - A pile of wood 4 feet wide, 4 feet high, and 8 feet long, contains 1 cord. A pile 4 feet wide, 4 feet high, and 1 foot long, contains 1 cord foot.
Page 318 - Separate the multiplier into convenient factors, multiply the multiplicand by one of the factors, and that product by another factor, and so on, till all the factors are employed ; the last prod* net is the true answer ; thus, 41 X 25 = 41 X 5 X 5.
Page 273 - If 15 men can do a piece of work in 12 days, how many men can do it in 20 days ? Ans. 9 men. 3. If 72 cents is paid for 6 hours' washing, how much should be paid for 8£ hours
Page 321 - ... accrued upon the yearly interests, then to cancel the yearly interests themselves, and then towards the payment of the principal. 3. Proceed in the same way with succeeding payments, computing, however, no interest beyond the time of settlement.
Page 65 - TABLE. 10 Mills (m.) = 1 Cent . . ct. 10 Cents = 1 Dime . . d. 10 Dimes = 1 Dollar . $. 10 Dollars = 1 Eagle . E.