Multiply the divisor, thus augmented, by the last figure of the root, and subtract the product from the dividend, and to the remainder bring down the next period for a new dividend. Written Arithmetic - Page 278by George Augustus Walton - 1876Full view - About this book
| Silas Totten - Algebra - 1836 - 332 pages
...and also the square of the last figure.; then multiply the divisor, so increased, by the same figure, and subtract the product from the dividend. To the remainder bring down the next period, and proceed as before ; and continue the operation in the same manner, through all the periods of the... | |
| Mathematics - 1836 - 488 pages
...divisor, which, so increased, multiply by the same figure for a subtrahend. 4. Subtract the subtrahend from the dividend, to the remainder bring down the next period for a new dividend, and so proceed. The proof is by involution. Rule for ike extraction of the cube root. 1. Having pointed... | |
| Silas Totten - Algebra - 1836 - 360 pages
...found, and also to the divisor. 4. Multiply the divisor so increased by the aforementioned quotient, and subtract the product from the dividend. To the remainder bring down the next two terms for a new dividend, and double the two terms of the root already found for a new divisor,... | |
| Lyman Cobb - Arithmetic - 1836 - 228 pages
...quotient figure, and call the amount the subtrahend. 1. Substract the subtrahend from the dividend, and to the remainder bring down the next period for a new dividend, with which proceed as before ; and so on, till the whole is finished. NOTE. — If the divisor can... | |
| Peirpont Edward Bates Botham - Arithmetic - 1837 - 252 pages
...root, and also in the divisor. 4. Multiply the divisor, thus increased, by the last figure of the root, and subtract the product from the dividend. To the...remainder bring down the next period, for a new dividend. Double the root already found, for a new divisor, and proceed as before. Ex. Required the square root... | |
| Charles Guilford Burnham - Arithmetic - 1837 - 266 pages
...also on the right hand of the divisor. IV. Multiply the divisor by the figure in the root last found, and subtract the product from the dividend ; to the...remainder, bring down the next period for a new dividend. Double the root now found, for a new divisor, and proceed in the operation as before, until all the... | |
| Benjamin Peirce - Algebra - 1837 - 302 pages
...divisor, thus augmented, by the last figure of the root, subtract the product from the dividend, and to the remainder bring down the next period for a new dividend. Double the root now found for a new divisor and continue the operation as before, until all the periods... | |
| Luther Ainsworth - Arithmetic - 1837 - 306 pages
...figure of the root ; thett place the square of it under the first period, and subtract it therefromi and to the remainder bring down the next period, for a new dividend. ' Q. You have now found the first figure of the root ; what is the next process ? A* Double this first... | |
| Benjamin Peirce - Algebra - 1837 - 300 pages
...divisor, thus augmented, by the last figure of the root, subtract the product from the dividend, and to the remainder bring down the next period for a new dividend. Double' the root now found for a new divisor and continue the operation as before, until all the periods... | |
| Charles Davies - Arithmetic - 1838 - 292 pages
...divisor, thus augmented, by the last figure of the root, and subtract the product from the dividend, and to the remainder bring down the next period for a new dividend. But if the product should exceed the dividend, diminish the last figure of the root. V. Double the... | |
| |