Practical and Mental Arithmetic: On a New Plan, in which Mental Arithmetic is Combined with the Use of the Slate ...Richardson, Lord and Holbrook, 1830 - Arithmetic |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 35
Page 5
... apples in one hand , and one in the other , how many have you in both ? How many are two and one , then , put together ? 4. How many do your ears and eyes make , counted together ? 5. If you have two nuts in one hand , and two in the ...
... apples in one hand , and one in the other , how many have you in both ? How many are two and one , then , put together ? 4. How many do your ears and eyes make , counted together ? 5. If you have two nuts in one hand , and two in the ...
Page 8
... bushels of rye for 15 dollars , 6 bushels of apples for 6 dollars ; how much did he pay for both ? many are 15 and 6 ? 35. William has 4 marbles in one pocket , 6 in the other , and 3 in his right hand ; how many has he 8 ARITHMETIC . ос.
... bushels of rye for 15 dollars , 6 bushels of apples for 6 dollars ; how much did he pay for both ? many are 15 and 6 ? 35. William has 4 marbles in one pocket , 6 in the other , and 3 in his right hand ; how many has he 8 ARITHMETIC . ос.
Page 9
... apples as follows ; to James 7 , to Henry 9 , to William 10 ; how many did he give away ? How many are 7 , 9 and 10 ? 37. Rufus has 12 cents , James 12 , and Thomas 2 ; if Rufus and James should give Thomas all their cents , how many ...
... apples as follows ; to James 7 , to Henry 9 , to William 10 ; how many did he give away ? How many are 7 , 9 and 10 ? 37. Rufus has 12 cents , James 12 , and Thomas 2 ; if Rufus and James should give Thomas all their cents , how many ...
Page 10
... apples in both pockets ; in one pocket he has 11 , in the other 18 ; how many has he in one pocket more than in the other ? How many are 11 from 18 then ? Why ? 14. A boy gave 17 cents for some picture - books , which were worth no more ...
... apples in both pockets ; in one pocket he has 11 , in the other 18 ; how many has he in one pocket more than in the other ? How many are 11 from 18 then ? Why ? 14. A boy gave 17 cents for some picture - books , which were worth no more ...
Page 12
... 25 leave ? Why ? 31. You have 16 apples , and give 5 to your sister , 5 to your brother ; how many will you have left ? How many do 5 and 5 from 16 leave ? Why ? 32. A man bought a mirror for 12 dollars , 1292 ARITHMETIC.
... 25 leave ? Why ? 31. You have 16 apples , and give 5 to your sister , 5 to your brother ; how many will you have left ? How many do 5 and 5 from 16 leave ? Why ? 32. A man bought a mirror for 12 dollars , 1292 ARITHMETIC.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
50 cents acres amount answer apiece apples bbls broadcloth bushels bushels of rye called ciphers cloth cost common fraction compound interest contained cord feet cube root currency decimal places derive the following dimes divide dividend dollars equal example Exercises farthings federal money feet long feet wide following RULE foot gain gallons gals gills give greatest common divisor hence hogshead hundred illustrations we derive improper fraction least common denominator least common multiple leaves length lowest terms merchant bought miles mills mixed number molasses months multiplicand Multiply OPERATION oranges ounces payment pence pints pound present worth principal proceed proportion pupil pwts quarts rate per cent ratio Reduce remainder repetend Rufus shillings Slate sold solid feet solid inches square feet square rods square root subtract third term whole number write yards of cloth
Popular passages
Page 21 - Decedents," and to repeal said original sections, -and to repeal sections one (1), two (2), three (3), four (4), five (5), six (6), seven...
Page 245 - Hence, when the extremes and number of terms are given, to find the common difference, — Divide the difference of the extremes by the number of terms, less 1, and the quotient will be the common difference.
Page 199 - But if any payments be made before one year's interest hath accrued, then compute the interest on the principal sum due on the obligation for one year,* add it to the principal, and compute the interest on the sum paid from the time it was paid up to the end of the year; add it to the sum paid, and deduct that sum from the principal and interest added together.
Page 53 - TABLE. 10 Mills (m.) = 1 Cent . . ct. 10 Cents = 1 Dime . . d. 10 Dimes = 1 Dollar . $. 10 Dollars = 1 Eagle . E.
Page 173 - Bought 40 gallons of molasses, at 27 cents a gallon ; but, by accident, 4 gallons leaked out ; at what rate must I sell the remainder, per gallon, to lose nothing?
Page 242 - 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 76 - In 2 ? In 3 ? In 4? In 5? In 6? In 7? In 8? In 9? In 10? In 11 ? 5.
Page 255 - Two persons, A and B, have the same income: A saves |- of his yearly ; but B, by spending $150 per annum more than A, at the end of 8 years, finds himself $400 in*debt ; what is their income, and what does each spend per annum '? A.
Page 172 - B $200, to be paid in 6 months ; $300, in 12 months ; $500, in 3 months ; what is the equated time for the payment of the whole?
Page 197 - ... due: add that interest to the principal, and from the sum subtract the payment made at that time, together with the preceding payments (if any) and the remainder forms a new principal ; on which, compute and subtract the interest, as upon the first principal: and proceed in this manner to the time of the judgment.