| William Frothingham Bradbury - Algebra - 1877 - 302 pages
...added to three fourths the distance from B to C is twice the distance from C to D. What is the distance from A to B, from B to C, and from C to D ? 59. A laborer was hired for 40 days ; for each day he wrought he was to receive $2.50, and for... | |
| Joseph Ray - Arithmetic - 1880 - 420 pages
...line. From A to D is 1463 miles ; from A to C, 728 miles ; and from B to D, 1317 miles. How far is it from A to B, from B to C, and from C to D ? A to B, 146 miles ; B to C, 582 miles ; C to D, 735 miles. BUSINESS TERMS AND EXPLANATIONS. 55.... | |
| William Henry Malone - Real property - 1883 - 824 pages
...and D. had had possession of a tract of land for upwards of forty years under successive conveyances from A. to B., from B. to C., and from C. to D., with the exception of five years between the twentieth and twenty-fifth years, during which period... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - Electronic journals - 1885 - 598 pages
...a, b, c, be the angular points of an equilateral triangle, and barbs be drawn on the sides pointing from a to b, from b to c, and from c to a respectively, the angular points a, b, c will be undistinguished from each other, each has an arrow... | |
| W. J. Johnston - Geometry, Analytic - 1893 - 462 pages
...If A, B, C are three points in a straight line AB + BC + CA = o. For if a point travels successively from A to B, from B to C, and from C to A, the total distance traversed is zero. Or thns : Let a, b, c be the distances of A, B, C from a fixed... | |
| William Mitchell Gillespie - Surveying - 1897 - 482 pages
...elevation of three stations have all been computed, and are + 126, — 160, + 30, proceeding consecutively from A to B, from B to C, and from C to A ; then, if v1? »>*, v3 are the corrections required to make the sum of these three quantities equal... | |
| Scotland - 1900 - 1174 pages
...begin by selecting a chain of large towns — A, B, C, and D. I will build a line from London to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to D. After that, I will think about branch lines." The North - Western alone of British railways recognised... | |
| Charles Jasper Joly - Quaternions - 1905 - 356 pages
...The vectors , y'=UVaj8, terminate at the vertices of the polar triangle, rotation round these points from A to B, from B to C and from C to A being positive ; and in terms of these vectors the equation may be written in the forms, iO -•- =... | |
| David Mair - Mathematics - 1907 - 408 pages
...plane ABC at right angles, naming the points ABC in such an order that the direction of rotation is from A to B, from B to C, and from C to A (Fig. 27). The screw is at the same time going through the plane towards D and E. Make it a condition... | |
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