A Practical Treatise on Arithmetic ...: Combining the Useful Properties of Former Works with the Modern Improvements ... To which is Added Two Methods of Bookkeeping ...Otis, Broaders, and Company, 1841 - 340 páginas |
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Página 5
... merchant will find no work that can be studied with greater advantage , or which contains more that is really useful for his purpose , while the mode of reasoning and the general plan are well suited to the scientific or literary ...
... merchant will find no work that can be studied with greater advantage , or which contains more that is really useful for his purpose , while the mode of reasoning and the general plan are well suited to the scientific or literary ...
Página 6
... merchant , should be read by all who desire to understand books of travels , histories , or even a common newspaper . Many examples marked in this work for the slate , are readily performed in the mind , and the scholar should be ...
... merchant , should be read by all who desire to understand books of travels , histories , or even a common newspaper . Many examples marked in this work for the slate , are readily performed in the mind , and the scholar should be ...
Página 25
... merchant owes one man in Boston 975 dollars , one in New York 483 , another in New York 237 , one in New Orleans 87 , and various other persons 689 ; what is the amount of all his debts ? Ans . 2,471 dollars . 5. If you buy a yoke of ...
... merchant owes one man in Boston 975 dollars , one in New York 483 , another in New York 237 , one in New Orleans 87 , and various other persons 689 ; what is the amount of all his debts ? Ans . 2,471 dollars . 5. If you buy a yoke of ...
Página 26
... merchant owns a sloop worth 1,000 dollars , a schooner worth 5,675 dollars , a brig worth 8,340 dollars , and a ship worth 12,345 dollars ; what is the value of all these vessels ? Ans . 27,360 dollars . 5. A man owns one farm ...
... merchant owns a sloop worth 1,000 dollars , a schooner worth 5,675 dollars , a brig worth 8,340 dollars , and a ship worth 12,345 dollars ; what is the value of all these vessels ? Ans . 27,360 dollars . 5. A man owns one farm ...
Página 27
... merchant , with forty - seven thousand , six hundred and ninety - five bushels ; another person with eight thousand , two hundred and seventy - nine bushels , and he wants himself three thousand , five hundred and forty - five bushels ...
... merchant , with forty - seven thousand , six hundred and ninety - five bushels ; another person with eight thousand , two hundred and seventy - nine bushels , and he wants himself three thousand , five hundred and forty - five bushels ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acres amount annuity apiece apples barrels bill of exchange bought breadth bushels butter called carats cash cask common fraction compound interest compound numbers contain cost cube root cubic feet cubic ft currency day book decimal fraction denominator diameter divide dividend divisor dollars equal Explain how example Explanation farmer figure fulcrum gallons gals give gold greatest common divisor heaps hhds hogshead hundred hundredths improper fraction inches insured last term leaves leger LESSON lever merchant miles molasses months multiply number of terms obtain OPERATION ounces paid payment pecks performed piece present worth prism progression by quotient proportion pwts quantity quarts receive remainder rods rule sell share shillings silver Slate sold Spanish dollars specific gravity square root subtract surface tens thousand Troy Weight units weight whole numbers write yard
Pasajes populares
Página 246 - These are usually accounted six in number, viz. the Lever, the Wheel and Axle, the Pulley, the Inclined Plane, the Wedge, and the Screw.
Página 66 - To reduce a mixed number to an improper fraction. Multiply the whole number by the denominator of the fraction, and to the product add the given numerator.
Página 329 - Thirty days after sight of this first of exchange (second and third of the same tenor and date unpaid...
Página 157 - Compute the interest to the time of the first payment ; if that be one year or more from the time the interest commenced, add it to the principal, and deduct the payment from the sum total. If there be after payments made, compute the interest on the balance due to the next payment, and then deduct the payment as above; and in like manner from one payment to another, till all the payments are absorbed; provided the time between one payment and another be one year or more.
Página 223 - If the vessel be double-decked, take the length thereof from the fore part of the main stem to the after part of the stern-post above the upper deck; the breadth thereof at the broadest part above the main wales...
Página 262 - There are five things in arithmetical progression, any three of which being given, the other two may be found : — 1st. The first term. ' 2d. The last term. 3d. The number of terms. 4th. The common difference. 5th. The sum of al!
Página 166 - Multiply each debt by its term of credit, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the debts. The quotient will be the average term of credit.
Página 224 - Thus 4x4=16: the number 16 is the 2nd power or square of 4. If a number be multiplied by itself, and the product arising, be again multiplied by the number, the second product is called the 3rd power, or cube of the number.
Página 209 - The area of a triangle is equal to half the product of its base by its altitude.
Página 158 - ... 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 as above...