| Colin Macfarquhar, George Gleig - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1797 - 450 pages
...fu m is that with which they гч-oin and с eafe to be (or to be augmented and diminiihed). Tin re is a limit which the velocity at the end of the motion may attain, but not exceed ; and this is the ultimate velocity. And there is the like limit in all quantities and proportions... | |
| Isaac Newton - Celestial mechanics - 1803 - 344 pages
...firft or laft fum is that with which they begin and ceafe to be (or to be augmented or diminifhed). There is a limit which the velocity at the end of...limit in all quantities and proportions that begin and ceafe to be. And fmce fuch limits are certain and definite, to determine the fame is a problem, ftrictly... | |
| Isaac Newton - Celestial mechanics - 1803 - 310 pages
...firft or laft fum is that with which they begin and ceafe to be (or to be augmented or diminifhed). There is a limit which the velocity at the end of...not exceed. This is the ultimate velocity. And there ia the like limit in all quantities and proportions that begin and ceafe to be. And fmce fuch limits... | |
| John Mason Good - 1819 - 788 pages
...be. And the first or last sum is that with which they begin and cea«e to be (or to be augmented and diminished). There is a limit which the velocity at the end of the motion may attain, but not exceed ; and this is the ultimate velocity. And there is the like limit in all quantities and proportions... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1816 - 778 pages
...firft or laft fum is that with which they begin and ceafe to be (or to be augmented and climinilhed). There is a limit which the velocity at the end of the motion may attain, but not exceed ; and this is the ultimate velocity. And there is the like limit in all quantities and proportions... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 438 pages
...be. And the tirst or last sum is that with which they begin and cease to be (or to be augmented and diminished). There is a limit which the velocity at the end of the motion may attain, but not exceed ; and this is the ultimate velocity. And there is the like limit in all quantities and proportions... | |
| Robert Potts - Algebra - 1879 - 672 pages
...quantities is that with which they begin to be. And the first or last sum is that with which they begin and cease to be (or to be augmented or diminished). There...end of the motion may attain, but not exceed. This ie the ultimate velocity. And there is the like limit in all quantities and proportions that begin... | |
| William Bragg Ewald - Mathematics - 2005 - 696 pages
...to be. And the first or last sum is that with which they begin and cease to be (or to be increased or diminished). There is a limit which the velocity...the motion may attain, but not exceed. This is the last velocity. And there is likewise a limit in all quantities and proportions that begin and that... | |
| Mary Tiles - Mathematics - 2004 - 276 pages
...be understood that ratio not before they vanish, nor afterwards, but with which they vanish. . . . There is a limit which the velocity at the end of the motion may obtain, but not exceed. This is the ultimate velocity. And there is the like limit in all quantities... | |
| |