Intermediate Arithmetic: By William J. Milne ... |
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Page 7
... Two , Three , Four , Five , Six , Seven , Eight , Nine . Each of these , except naught , is called a significant figure . Naught is also called zero and cipher . 7. The number that is one more than nine is 7 NOTATION AND NUMERATION.
... Two , Three , Four , Five , Six , Seven , Eight , Nine . Each of these , except naught , is called a significant figure . Naught is also called zero and cipher . 7. The number that is one more than nine is 7 NOTATION AND NUMERATION.
Page 13
... cipher were placed to the right of the 1 ? 21. When we reach a thousand , we begin to count the thousands as we did the units , thus : 1 thousand , 2 thousand , etc. , up to 999 thousand , and when we have a thousand thousand , we call ...
... cipher were placed to the right of the 1 ? 21. When we reach a thousand , we begin to count the thousands as we did the units , thus : 1 thousand , 2 thousand , etc. , up to 999 thousand , and when we have a thousand thousand , we call ...
Page 17
... cipher must be written in the first place at the right of the decimal point . Thus , five cents is written $ .05 ; three cents , 8.03 ; seven dollars two cents five mills is written $ 7.025 . EXERCISES . 31. Read the following : 1 . 2 ...
... cipher must be written in the first place at the right of the decimal point . Thus , five cents is written $ .05 ; three cents , 8.03 ; seven dollars two cents five mills is written $ 7.025 . EXERCISES . 31. Read the following : 1 . 2 ...
Page 42
... ciphers ; by 1000 by annexing three ciphers , how may a number be mul- tiplied by 10 , 100 , 1000 , etc. , or by 1 with any number of ciphers annexed ? 59. A number is multiplied by 10 , 100 , 1000 , etc. , or by 1 with any number of ...
... ciphers ; by 1000 by annexing three ciphers , how may a number be mul- tiplied by 10 , 100 , 1000 , etc. , or by 1 with any number of ciphers annexed ? 59. A number is multiplied by 10 , 100 , 1000 , etc. , or by 1 with any number of ...
Page 43
... ciphers are omitted from the right of the partial products . The significant figures , however , occupy their proper places . Thus , in multiplying by 3 tens the product is 1119 tens , and conse- quently , the right - hand figure of ...
... ciphers are omitted from the right of the partial products . The significant figures , however , occupy their proper places . Thus , in multiplying by 3 tens the product is 1119 tens , and conse- quently , the right - hand figure of ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres altitude annexed apiece apples avoirdupois barrels bought bushels carpet commission common fraction contained cord cubic decimal places decimal point denominate number divided dividend division dollars dozen dry measure earn eighths equal exact divisors expenses EXPLANATION expressed farm feet figure Find the value following numbers fourths gain gallons Give a rule half Hence horse hundred hundredths improper fractions inches integer least common denominator measure miles per hour MILNE'S INT minuend mixed number month multiplicand Multiply notation number of ciphers number of decimal oranges paid parallelogram pound premium proceeds Property Insurance quarts quotient rate of discount receive Reduce remainder rods sell similar fractions sixths subtracted Subtrahend tenths thick third thousand thousandths tons TROY WEIGHT twelfths units wide worth Write WRITTEN EXERCISES
Popular passages
Page 143 - TIME 60 seconds (sec.) = 1 minute (min.) 60 minutes =1 hour (hr.) 24...
Page 144 - Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November ; All the rest have thirty-one, Except the second month alone, Which has but twenty-eight, in fine, Till leap year gives it twenty-nine.
Page 139 - Square Measure 144 square inches (sq. in.) = 1 square foot (sq. ft.) 9 square feet = 1 square yard (sq. yd.) 30£ square yards = 1 square rod (sq. rd.) 160 square rods = 1 acre (A.) 640 acres = 1 square mile (sq.
Page 140 - LIQUID MEASURE 4 gills (gi.) = 1 pint (pt.) 2 pints — 1 quart (qt...
Page 118 - A can do a piece of work in 8 days, and B can do it in 10 days. In what time can both do it together ? 22.
Page 35 - The Sign of Multiplication is an oblique cross, x . It is read multiplied by when the multiplicand precedes it and times when the multiplier precedes it. Thus...
Page 51 - The Dividend is the number to be divided. The Divisor is the number by which we divide.
Page 132 - ... in the divisor. 1. If the quotient does not contain a sufficient number of decimal places, the deficiency must be supplied by prefixing ciphers. 2. Before commencing the division, the number of decimal places in the dividend should be made at least equal to the number of decimal places in the divisor. 3. When there is a remainder after using all the figures of the dividend, annex decimal ciphers and continue the division. 4. For...
Page 59 - PROOF. — - Multiply the divisor by the quotient, and to the product add the remainder, if any. If the work is correct, the result will equal the dividend.