| Jeremiah Day, James Bates Thomson - Algebra - 1848 - 264 pages
...product is a quantity of the same kind as the multiplicand. ' 70.- Multiplying by a whole number is taking the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. Multiplying by 1, i's taking the multiplicnnd once, as a. Mult, by 2, is taking the multiplicand twice,... | |
| James Bates Thomson - Arithmetic - 1848 - 434 pages
...OP [SECT. VII. MULTIPLICATION OP FRACTIONS. 209. We have seen that multiplying by a whole number, is taking the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. (Art. 82.) On the other hand. If the multiplier is only a part of a unit, it is plain we must take... | |
| Dana Pond Colburn, George Augustus Walton - Arithmetic - 1849 - 112 pages
...and a product in multiplication may be regarded as a number representing the sum which would result from taking the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. By division we can determine two distinct things ; first, into how many parts of a given size a given... | |
| Charles Davies - Arithmetic - 1850 - 412 pages
...will l_* ***** multiplicand, and make as many such ]****** represent the number of units which result from taking the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. Let us now change the multiplier into the multiplicand, and let the multiplicand become the multiplier.... | |
| Thomas H. Palmer - Arithmetic - 1854 - 356 pages
...effect, multiplying by i or by ^V, &c., really is division. For multiplication, it will be remembered, is taking the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. . Exercises for the Slate and Black-board. 1. What will 7 yds. 3 qr. 2 na. of cloth come to, at £2... | |
| Thomas H. Palmer - Arithmetic - 1854 - 368 pages
...multiplying by •£ or by 5)5, &c., really is division. For multiplication, it will be remembered, is taking the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. Exercises for the Slate and Black-board. 1. What will 7 yds. 3 qr. 2 na. of cloth come to, at £2 2s.... | |
| James Bates Thomson - Arithmetic - 1854 - 106 pages
...? Ans. Take the multiplicand twice. Thus, 4X2 = 8. 3. How multiply by any whole number ? Ans. TAKE the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. 4. Hoqr then do you multiply by 1 half? Ans. Take 1 halflhe multiplicand once. Thus, 6 X 4=3. 5. How... | |
| 1855 - 424 pages
...factors in multiplication is always to be considered as a number. The operation consists in repeating the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. How then can a line, a surface, or a salid, become a multiplier ? To explain this it will be necessary... | |
| Elias Loomis - Algebra - 1855 - 356 pages
...take Qax'— 2amn + 3by'1 — 4m. Ans. SECTION IV. MULTIPLICATION. (48.) Multiplication is repeating the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. When several quantities are to be multiplied together, the result will be the same in whatever order... | |
| Elias Loomis - Algebra - 1856 - 280 pages
...15. From a' \-abc-6 take 6±abc-a\ Ans. SECTION IV. MULTIPLICATION. (53.) MULTIPLICATION is repeating the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. CASE I. When both the factors are monomials. If the quantity a is to be repeated five times, we may... | |
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