The Essentials of Arithmetic, Oral and Written, Book 1 |
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12 cents 20 cents 9 mo apples barrel bill board-foot bought boys bushel Change column Compare cord Count cubic feet cubic foot cubic inches decimal point denominator dimes Divide dividend and divisor dollar dozen Draw an oblong Dry Measures eggs equal numbers figures fill Find the amount Find the cost Find the sum following numbers fractions gain gallons Give quotients greatest common divisor half-dollar hundred hundredths improper fractions inch cubes inches long inches wide long ton measure miles milk mills minuend mixed number months Multiplicand Multiply nickels numbers in lines ORAL ounces pecks pencils pints proper fraction quarters quarts quires receive rectangles remainder Roman Numerals rows sell smallest terms sold square feet square inches square mile square rod Subtract subtrahend surfaces Take tens tons of coal weeks weigh WRITTEN
Popular passages
Page 19 - LIQUID MEASURE 4 gills (gi.) = 1 pint (pt.) 2 pints = 1 quart (qt...
Page 154 - Multiplying or dividing both Dividend and Divisor by the same number, does not change the Quotient.
Page 95 - At 2 cents each, what will be received for 94,287 newspapers ? 3. In a school there are 12 classes, and an average of 50 pupils in a class. If every one in the school should make 500 straight marks on each side of his slate, how many would be made in all ? 4.
Page 102 - What is the common way of writing a number of dollars and cents? $1, 3 dimes, 7 cents is written ~— Dimes are written in the first place at the right of the decimal point as tenths of a dollar, and cents in the second place as hundredths of a dollar.
Page 124 - If- inches, really fractions, or fractions only inform? A proper fraction is less in value than 1. The value of an improper fraction is 1 or more than 1.
Page 150 - JAofa$ ^ of a mile 4. Write the fractions in Exercises 1 and 2, using denominators. 5. Write the fractions in Exercises 3 without denominators. 6. Compare the number of ciphers in the denominator with the number of figures at the right of the point. 7. Are decimal fractions generally written with or without denominators? How may we tell the denominator? The denominator of a decimal fraction is always 1, with as many ciphers as there are figures at the right of the point. 8. Why is our system of numbers...
Page 128 - Divide the less number by the remainder, the last divisor by the last remainder, and so on, till nothing remains. The last divisor will be the greatest common divisor sought.