Cobb's Explantory Arithmetick, Number Two: Containing the Compound Rules, and All that is Necessary of Every Other Rule in Arithmetick for Practical Purposes and the Transactions of Business ... To which is Annexed a Practical System of Book-keepingDesilver, Thomas, & Company, 1836 - 216 páginas |
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Página iv
... five rules of Arith- metick , occasioned , no doubt , by the fewness of examples , and by the want of interest in those that are given . An Arithmetick should not consist , as is most generally the case , merely of an assemblage of ...
... five rules of Arith- metick , occasioned , no doubt , by the fewness of examples , and by the want of interest in those that are given . An Arithmetick should not consist , as is most generally the case , merely of an assemblage of ...
Página v
... five fundamental rules of Arithme- tick . These rules have been treated of more largely than is customary , from the belief that most pupils pass from these to the more difficult rules before they are thoroughly acquainted with them ...
... five fundamental rules of Arithme- tick . These rules have been treated of more largely than is customary , from the belief that most pupils pass from these to the more difficult rules before they are thoroughly acquainted with them ...
Página 9
... five fundamental rules of Arithmetick . You have learned , to enu- merate , to add , to substract , to multiply , and to divide numbers ; that is , simple , whole numbers . You must now learn to work figures employed to express ...
... five fundamental rules of Arithmetick . You have learned , to enu- merate , to add , to substract , to multiply , and to divide numbers ; that is , simple , whole numbers . You must now learn to work figures employed to express ...
Página 17
... five mills for one orange , and three cents and five mills for another : how many cents do you pay for both ? 2. If you have five cents in one hand , and fifteen cents in the other ; how many dimes have you in both ? 3. James paid six ...
... five mills for one orange , and three cents and five mills for another : how many cents do you pay for both ? 2. If you have five cents in one hand , and fifteen cents in the other ; how many dimes have you in both ? 3. James paid six ...
Página 18
... five quarts and one pint ; how many pecks of chestnuts did they gather ? 14. If you buy four bushels and one peck of wheat of one farmer , and five bushels and three pecks of another ; how many bushels do you buy of both ? 15. A ...
... five quarts and one pint ; how many pecks of chestnuts did they gather ? 14. If you buy four bushels and one peck of wheat of one farmer , and five bushels and three pecks of another ; how many bushels do you buy of both ? 15. A ...
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Cobb's Explantory Arithmetick, Number Two: Containing the Compound Rules ... Lyman Cobb Sin vista previa disponible - 2017 |
Términos y frases comunes
Arithmetick borrow bushels carry the quotient cents and five cipher column of cents column of days column of pounds Compound Interest Compound Substraction cost cube root currency decimal dimes divide the amount dividend divisor dollars drachms DRY MEASURE equal EXAMPLES For Theoretical EXPLANATIONS farthings federal money figures five mills four gain gallon given number given sum higher denomination hogshead hundred-weight hundredths improper fraction inches integer left hand lower denomination lower line lowest MEASURE merator merchant bought miles moidores multiply nett weight ounces payment pence pints present worth quantity quarters quarts Reduce Reduction Ascending remainder right hand denomination Rule of Three separatrix shillings Simple Substraction Slate sold solid feet square root substract the lower tare TARE AND TRET tenths Theoretical Exercise third term thousandths Three Direct tion tret TROY WEIGHT tuns upper line Vulgar Fractions wheat whole amount whole numbers
Pasajes populares
Página 160 - 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 as above...
Página 212 - 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.
Página 168 - ... then multiply the second and third terms together, and divide their product by the first, the quotient will be the fourth term or answer, in the same denomination vj'ilh the third term.
Página 160 - If the payment be less than the interest, the surplus of the interest must not be taken to augment the principal ; but interest continues on the former principal until the period when the payments, taken together, exceed the interest due...
Página 158 - If a year extends beyond the time of payment, then find the amount of the principal...
Página 159 - The rule for casting interest, when partial payments have been made, is to apply the payment, in the first place, to the discharge of the interest then due. " If the payment exceeds the interest, the surplus goes towards discharging the principal, and the subsequent interest is to be computed on the balance of principal remaining due.
Página 154 - ... 3d. If there be parts of a year, as months and days, work for the months by the aliquot parts of a year...
Página 160 - 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 212 - Separate the given number into periods of three figures each, by putting a point over the unit figure, and every third figure beyond the place of units. 2. Find the greatest cube in the left hand period, and put its root in the quotient. 3.
Página 12 - TROY WEIGHT. 24 grains (gr.) = 1 pennyweight (pwt.). 20 pennyweights = 1 ounce (oz.). 12 ounces = 1 pound (lb.). 351. Apothecaries' weight is used in mixing medicines and in selling them at retail. APOTHECARIES