A Practical Arithmetic |
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Page viii
... person or firm to whom goods are sent . Consignor . The person or firm who sends goods to another . Corporation . An association of individuals authorized by law to transact business as a single person . Couplet . The two terms of a ...
... person or firm to whom goods are sent . Consignor . The person or firm who sends goods to another . Corporation . An association of individuals authorized by law to transact business as a single person . Couplet . The two terms of a ...
Page ix
... person or firm to pay a specified sum of money to another . Drawee of a draft . The person or firm on whom the draft is drawn . The drawee is expected to pay the draft . Drawer of a draft . The person who signs the draft . Duties ...
... person or firm to pay a specified sum of money to another . Drawee of a draft . The person or firm on whom the draft is drawn . The drawee is expected to pay the draft . Drawer of a draft . The person who signs the draft . Duties ...
Page xi
... persons to carry on business . Par value . Face or nominal value . Pendulum . A body suspended by a straight line from a fixed point , and moving freely about that point as a centre . Percentage of a number . One or more hundredths of ...
... persons to carry on business . Par value . Face or nominal value . Pendulum . A body suspended by a straight line from a fixed point , and moving freely about that point as a centre . Percentage of a number . One or more hundredths of ...
Page xii
... persons and corporations for the support of the government and other purposes . United States money . The legal currency of the United States . Units . The standards by which we count separate objects or measure magnitudes . Verify . To ...
... persons and corporations for the support of the government and other purposes . United States money . The legal currency of the United States . Units . The standards by which we count separate objects or measure magnitudes . Verify . To ...
Page 30
... persons admitted to the Philadelphia Exposition in one day was 219,526 ; to the Paris Exposition , 397,150 ; to the Chicago Exposition , 729,203 . Find the excess of Chicago's greatest number in one day over the sum of the greatest ...
... persons admitted to the Philadelphia Exposition in one day was 219,526 ; to the Paris Exposition , 397,150 ; to the Chicago Exposition , 729,203 . Find the excess of Chicago's greatest number in one day over the sum of the greatest ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres annual interest annuity average bought bushels called cents a pound cistern coal common fraction compound interest contains cords cube root cubic feet cubic foot decimal point denominator diameter discount dividend divisor dollars equal EXERCISE expressed figures Find the amount Find the cost Find the interest Find the number Find the product frustum gallons given number grand list hundred hundredths improper fraction inches integral number kilograms least common multiple length long tons longitude marked price meter miles million minuend mixed number multiplicand Multiply paid payment pints quarts quotient rate per cent ratio rectangular Reduce remainder rods Sept short ton sold SOLUTION square square miles subtract subtrahend taxation tens term thousand tons units weighs wheat whole number wide worth write WRITTEN yards
Popular passages
Page 355 - 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 148 - Dry Measure 2 pints (pt.) =1 quart (qt.) 8 quarts = 1 peck (pk.) 4 pecks = 1 bushel (bu.) 2150.42 cu.
Page 339 - Thirty days after sight of this first of exchange (second and third of the same tenor and date unpaid...
Page 156 - CUBIC MEASURE 1728 cubic inches (cu. in.) = 1 cubic foot (cu. ft.) 27 cubic feet = 1 cubic yard (cu. yd.) 128 cubic feet = 1 cord (cd...
Page 270 - ... is equal to the square root of the difference of the squares of the hypotenuse and the other side.
Page 144 - LIQUID MEASURE 4 gills (gi.) = 1 pint (pt.) 2 pints — 1 quart (qt...
Page 268 - Multiply the divisor, thus increased, by the last figure of the root; subtract the product from the dividend, and to the remainder bring down the next period for a new dividend. 5. Double the whole root already found for a new divisor, and continue the operation as before, until all the periods are brought down. NOTE.
Page 249 - That is, in any proportion either extreme is equal to the product of the means divided by the other extreme ; and either mean is equal to the product of the extremes divided by the other mean.
Page 83 - In this and the following examples, answers to the nearest hundredth are sufficiently correct. 11. A cubic foot of platinum, the heaviest substance known, weighs 1365 pounds. A cubic foot of water weighs 62.5 pounds. How many times as heavy as water is platinum ? 12. How many times as heavy as water is common sand, a cubic foot of sand weighing 103 pounds ? 13. Granite is 2.72 times as heavy as water. Find the weight of a cubic foot of granite. 14. Wrought iron is 7.77 times as heavy as water. Find...
Page 154 - Square Measure 144 square inches (sq. in.) = 1 square foot (sq. ft.) 9 square feet = 1 square yard (sq. yd.) 30j square yards = 1 square rod (sq.