Cancel the common factors from both the dividend and divisor. II. Then divide the product of the remaining factors of the dividend by the product of the remaining factors of the divisor, and the result will be the quotient. An Elementary Arithmetic - Page 75by Daniel Bernard Hagar - 1877 - 224 pagesFull view - About this book
| Samuel Mecutchen - 1877 - 128 pages
...or ^-, is the required result. RULE. Cancel all the factors common to both dividend and divisor, and divide the product of the remaining factors of the...the product of the remaining factors of the divisor. Note 1. — When a factor is cancelled, the quotient should take its place, whether this is 1 or more... | |
| Horatio Nelson Robinson - Arithmetic - 1877 - 250 pages
...x 4 by 36 x 21 x 6. 60 RULE. — I. Cancel all the factors common to both dividend and divisor. II. Divide the product of the remaining factors of the...the product of the remaining factors of the divisor, and the result will be the quotient. When a factor equal to the number itself is canceled, the unit... | |
| Horatio Nelson Robinson, Daniel W. Fish - Arithmetic - 1877 - 374 pages
...it. II. Cancel all the factors common to both dividend and divisor. III. Divide the product of tJte remaining factors of the dividend by the product of the remaining factors of the divisor, and the result will be the quotient. 1. Eejecting a factor from any number is dividing the number by... | |
| Edward Brooks - Arithmetic - 1877 - 528 pages
...remaining factors, we have 75. Rule. — I. Cancel the common factors from the dividend and divisor. II. Then divide the product of the remaining factors of the dividend by the product of (he remaining factors of the divisor. NOTES. — 1. The unit 1 takes the place of a cancelled factor,... | |
| William James Milne - Arithmetic - 1877 - 402 pages
...and for a divisor 5, which gives a quotient of 4f. RULE. — Reject from the dividend and divisor oil factors common to both, and then divide the product of the remaining factors of tiie dividend by the product of the remaining factors of the divisor. When all the factors of both... | |
| Edward Brooks - Arithmetic - 1878 - 164 pages
...have 7 divided by 2 or 3J. RULE. — I. Cancel the common factors from the dividend and divisor. II. Then divide the product of the remaining factors of...the product of the remaining factors of the divisor. NOTB. — When a factor is cancelled, the unit, 1, takes its place bat need not be written, except... | |
| Edward Brooks - Arithmetic - 1889 - 482 pages
...* 10 divided by 3, or 3f Role. — I. Cancel the common factors from the dividend And divisor. I 1. Then divide the product of the remaining factors of...dividend by the product of the remaining factors of tht diwior. _ NOTES. — 1. The unit 1 takes the place of a cancelled factor, but need not be written,... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - Arithmetic - 1879 - 238 pages
...dividend 3, which ia the quotient. Rule. — Cancel all the factors common to both dividend and divisor, and then divide the product of the remaining factors...the dividend by the product of the remaining factors in the divisor. When a factor is canceled, 1 is understood to remain, but does not require to be written,... | |
| Samuel Mecutchen - Arithmetic - 1880 - 262 pages
...subtracting the numerators. CANCELLATION. Cancel all the factors common to both dividend and divisor, and divide the product of the remaining factors of the...the product of the remaining factors of the divisor. MULTIPLICATION. Change whole or mixed numbers to improper fractions, and cancel all factors common... | |
| Horatio Nelson Robinson - Arithmetic - 1875 - 472 pages
...composing the, divisor below it. II. Cancel all the factors common to both dividend and divisor. III. Divide the product of the remaining factors of the...the product of the remaining factors of the divisor, and the result will be the quotient. NOTES. — 1. When a factor is canceled, the unit, 1, is supposed... | |
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