Walkingame's Arithmetic Simplified ... |
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... amount of matter it contains , the lowness of its price , and its intrinsic excellency , must commend it to the patronage of the religious public . CLOTH , GILT EDGES , 1s . 6D . PRETTY TALES FOR YOUTH , Containing some of the most ...
... amount of matter it contains , the lowness of its price , and its intrinsic excellency , must commend it to the patronage of the religious public . CLOTH , GILT EDGES , 1s . 6D . PRETTY TALES FOR YOUTH , Containing some of the most ...
Page 28
... amount to 140 per minute , and their difference is 60. Required the revolutions of each wheel . Ans . 40 least number . 100 the greatest . A TABLE OF COMPOSITE NUMBERS . No.Com . prts || No . Com . prts . No. Com . prts . No. Com . prts ...
... amount to 140 per minute , and their difference is 60. Required the revolutions of each wheel . Ans . 40 least number . 100 the greatest . A TABLE OF COMPOSITE NUMBERS . No.Com . prts || No . Com . prts . No. Com . prts . No. Com . prts ...
Page 35
... amounts to 3 days , 2 hours , and 40 minutes . This is regulated by the Gregorian calendar and the British Legislature : so that when a number denoting a complete century is not divisible by 4 , as the 19th TABLES OF MEASURES . 335.
... amounts to 3 days , 2 hours , and 40 minutes . This is regulated by the Gregorian calendar and the British Legislature : so that when a number denoting a complete century is not divisible by 4 , as the 19th TABLES OF MEASURES . 335.
Page 40
... amount ? Ans . 3727 qrs . , 3 bush . , 2 pks . 14. A nobleman's stock of Wine is , of port , 4 pipes , 3 puncheons , 6 gals . , 1 qt .; of Champane 2 pipes , 30 gals . 1 qt .; of Madeira , 5 pipes , 40 gals . , 3 qts .; of Hock , 4 ...
... amount ? Ans . 3727 qrs . , 3 bush . , 2 pks . 14. A nobleman's stock of Wine is , of port , 4 pipes , 3 puncheons , 6 gals . , 1 qt .; of Champane 2 pipes , 30 gals . 1 qt .; of Madeira , 5 pipes , 40 gals . , 3 qts .; of Hock , 4 ...
Page 43
... amount of 754 added to 305 ? Ans . 8095 . 4. A horse in his furniture is worth £ 37 5s . , out of it 14 sovereigns ; how much does the price of the furniture exceed that of the horse ? Ans . £ 9 5s . 5. A merchant owed £ 750 ; he had in ...
... amount of 754 added to 305 ? Ans . 8095 . 4. A horse in his furniture is worth £ 37 5s . , out of it 14 sovereigns ; how much does the price of the furniture exceed that of the horse ? Ans . £ 9 5s . 5. A merchant owed £ 750 ; he had in ...
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Walkingame's Arithmetic [His Tutor's Assistant] Simplified and Improved. [&C ... Francis Walkingame No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
9 months acres allowing amount annuity annum Arithmetical barrels biquadrate Bought bushels cent.-what ciphers compound interest contained crowns cube root debt decimal denominator discount ditto Divide dividend divisor dozen ells equal farthings feet 6 inches figure gain gallons gals given number given to find greatest common measure gross guilders half half-crowns hogsheads horse hundred improper fraction Integer lease London lowest terms miles mixed number Mult Multiplicand Multiply neat weight number of terms ounce paid payable pence penny pennyweights pension pints pipes pound sterling pounds present payment present worth principal Proportion purchase quarters quarts quotient rate per cent rebate reckon Reduce remainder shillings sold square root sterling subtract subtrahend Table tare thousand Troy TROY WEIGHT VULGAR FRACTIONS weeks whole number WILLIAM NICHOLSON yard cost yards of cloth yearly rent
Popular passages
Page 117 - To reduce a mixed number to an improper fraction. RULE. Multiply the whole number by the denominator of the fraction, and to the product add the numerator for a new numerator, and place it over the denominator. 1. Reduce 127T^ to an improper fraction.
Page 118 - To reduce fractions of different denominators to equivalent fractions, having a common denominator. RULE. — Multiply each numerator into all the denominators except its own for the new numerators ; and multiply all the denominators together for a common denominator.
Page 139 - The top of a castle from the ground is 45 yards high, and is surrounded with a ditch 60 yards broad ; what length must a ladder be to reach from the outside of the ditch to the top of the castle ? Ans.
Page 56 - All small names are brought into great by dividing with so many of the less as make one of the greater.
Page 107 - II. When it is required to find how many of the last sort of coin, weight or measure, mentioned in the question,, are equal to a gjveu quantity of the first.
Page 101 - EXAMPLES. 1. A schoolmaster, being asked how many scholars he had, said, If I had as many, half as many, and one quarter as many more, I should have 264: how many had he?
Page 117 - To reduce a compound fraction to a single one. RULE. Multiply all the numerators together for a new numerator, and all the denominators for a new denominator, then reduce the new fraction to its lowest term by Case I.
Page 142 - To extract the Square Root of a Vulgar Fraction. RULE, Reduce the fraction to its lowest terms, then extract the square root of the numerator for a new numerator, and the square root of the denominator for a new denominator.
Page 142 - There is a cellar dug that is 12 feet every way, in length, breadth, and depth; how many solid feet of earth were taken out of it? Ans. 1728. 42. How many bricks 9 inches long and 4 inches wide, will pave a yard that is 20 feet square?
Page 72 - Multiply the first and second terms together, and divide the product by the third ; the quotient will be the answer in the same denomination as the middle term was reduced into.