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" Then multiply the second and third terms together, and divide the product by the first term: the quotient will be the fourth term, or answer. "
The American Tutor's Guide: Being a Compendium of Arithmetic. In Six Parts ... - Page 46
by James Thompson - 1808 - 172 pages
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A Treatise on Plane and Spherical Trigonometry: With Their Most Useful ...

John Bonnycastle - Trigonometry - 1806 - 464 pages
...others were taken. In the second method, having stated the proportion, according to the proper rule, multiply the second and third terms together, and divide the product by the first, and the quotient will be the fourth term required, for the natural numbers. Or, in working by logarithms,...
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The American Tutor's Assistant Revised, Or, A Compendious System of ...

Zachariah Jess - Arithmetic - 1810 - 222 pages
...ю less requiring less. RULE. Multiply the second and third terms together, and divide the produit by the first ; the quotient will be the fourth term, or answer : in the same name with the second. PROOF. Invert the question, beginning with the answer ; and the result will be the...
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A Treatise of Plane and Spherical Trigonometry: In Theory and Practice ...

Francis Nichols - Plane trigonometry - 1811 - 162 pages
...analogy be formed according to the proper rule above delivered; then, if the natural numbers be used, multiply the second and third terms together, and...by the first; the quotient will be the fourth term required. If logarithms be used, add the logarithms of the second and third terms, and from the sum...
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The Theory and Practice of Surveying: Containing All the Instructions ...

Robert Gibson - Surveying - 1811 - 580 pages
...be as much greater, or less than the third, as the second term is greater, or less than the first, then multiply the second and third terms together, and divide the product by the first term, and the quotient will be the answer ; — in the same denomination with the third term. EXAMPLES....
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The Teachers Assistant. Or, A System of Practical Arithmetic: Wherein the ...

Arithmetic - 1811 - 210 pages
...lowest in either ; and 5f the third consist of several denominations, reduce it to the lowest thereof: then multiply the second and third terms together, and divide the product by the first term : the quotient will be the answer in the same denomination as the third term. PROOF. Invert the...
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The American Arithmetic: Adapted to the Currency of the United States ...

Oliver Welch - Arithmetic - 1812 - 236 pages
...same denomination ; and reduce the middle number, or term, into the lowest denomination mentioned : then multiply the second and third terms together,...the product by the first ; the quotient will be the answer, or fourth term sought ; and always will be of the same depomiiuition as that of the middle...
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Practical Arithmetic: In Four Books ... Extracted from the Large and Entire ...

John Gough - Arithmetic - 1813 - 358 pages
...fraction must be of th« same name or kind, and reduced to fractions of the same name or denominator. Multiply the second and third terms together and divide the product by the first; the quotient is the fourth term required ; due regard being had to the rules laid down for multiplying, dividing...
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Easy Introduction to Mathematics, Volume 1

Charles Butler - Mathematics - 1814 - 540 pages
...in either. Likewise the second term must be reduced to the lowest denomination mentioned in it. IV. Multiply the second and third terms together, and...quotient will be the fourth term, or answer, in the same denomination into which the second term was reduced. arc the two means, and their product, viz. 4 X...
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Practical and Mental Arithmetic, on a New Plan, in which Mental Arithmetic ...

Roswell Chamberlain Smith - 1814 - 300 pages
...f -Л. Multiply the second and third terms to* gether, and divide their product by the first term ; the quotient will be the fourth term, or answer, in the same denomination with the third term. Q. How may this process of multiplying and dividing be, ш том...
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The village school improved; or, The new system of education practically ...

John Poole - 1815 - 170 pages
...namely, shillings. Q. Having attended to the three given terms, what do you proceed to do next? — A. I multiply the second and third terms together, and divide the product by the first. Q. Is not this last mentioned operation the main rule in the Rule of Three Direct?— A. Yes. Q. In...
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