| Charles Hutton - Mathematics - 1811 - 406 pages
...fraction. Ans. |. CASE VI. 2o Reduce Fractions of Different Denominators, to Equivalent Fractions having a Common Denominator. * MULTIPLY each numerator by all the denominators except its own, for the new numerators : and, multiply all the denominators together for a common denominator. Note, It... | |
| Charles Hutton - Mathematics - 1816 - 610 pages
...fraction. Ans. J. CASE VI. To Reduce Fractions of Different Denominators, to Equivalent fractions having a Common Denominator. * MULTIPLY each numerator by all the denominators except its own, for the new numerators : and multiply all thedenominators together foi a common denominator. Note, It is... | |
| Charles Hutton - Mathematics - 1822 - 616 pages
...fraction. Ans. J. CASE VI. To Reduce Fractions of Different Dcwminatort, to Equivalent Fractions having a Common Denominator. * MULTIPLY each numerator by all the denominators except its own, for the new numerators : and multiply all the denominators together for a common denominator. .•V.'fl,... | |
| James Mitchell - Mathematics - 1823 - 666 pages
...|of gof f =JX JX | = \ answer* as required. 4. To reduce fractions, having different denominators, to a common denominator. Multiply each numerator by all the denominators, except its own, for a new numerator ; and all the denominators together lor the common denominator; or Hind the least com*... | |
| B. M. Tyler - Arithmetic - 1827 - 308 pages
...T3T, have not a common denominator. RULE. Multiply all the denominators together, the product will be a common denominator. Multiply each numerator by all the denominators except its own ; the product written over the common denominator will form a fraction expressing the same part of... | |
| Charles Brooke - Mathematics - 1829 - 386 pages
...fraction to its lowest terms : divide both the numerator and denominator by their greatest common divisor. To reduce fractions to a common denominator: multiply...numerator by all the denominators except its own, for a new numerator ; and all the denominators together, for a new denominator. (И^. 96.) If the least... | |
| William Grier - Mechanical engineering - 1836 - 384 pages
...|f ; lastly, multiply the third by the denominators of the first and second, 3 and 4, we get £-§. It will be useful to look over what we have done....fractions together. It is very easy to see how we may add f and 4 of an inch, and that their sum is | ; but it is not quite so evident how we are to add § and... | |
| Richard W. Green - Algebra - 1839 - 156 pages
...fractions of different denominators. Multiply all the denominators together for a new denominator; and each numerator by all the denominators except its own, for new numerators ; remembering that if a compound numerator follows — , all the signs in it must be changed the moment... | |
| William Grier - Mechanical engineering - 1842 - 320 pages
...likewise, 3 multiplied by 4 multiplied by 5 is 60, and will be 60 in whatever order we take theifc—3 by 4 by 5, or 4 by 3 by 5, or 5 by 3 by 4 ; when,...together. It is very easy to see how we may add | and £ of an inch, and that their sum is £ ; but it is not quite so evident how we are to add -| and f... | |
| Admiralty - 1845 - 152 pages
...which have the same, or a common denominator. Multiply each numerator of the given fractions, into all the denominators except its own for new numerators, and all the denominators together, for a common denominator ; as in common arithmetic. Reduce — , %-, — to fractions having the same aoc... | |
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