| Almon Ticknor - Arithmetic - 1848 - 124 pages
...2. Reduce the first and second terms to the lowest denomination mentioned in either of them. ^/ 3. Multiply the second and third terms together, and divide by the first, and the quotient (the fourth term) will be the answer, in the same name to which the third was reduced ; then bring... | |
| Charles Arnold - 1850 - 164 pages
...and also reduce 24 feet to inches, that the two first terms may be in the same denomination ; we then multiply the second and third terms together, and divide by the first : this division gives a quotient 268 with a remainder 24, which is in the denomination feet, the same... | |
| rev. Frederick Calder - 1852 - 368 pages
...same name, and the third term contains but one denomination, therefore no reduction is required. I now multiply the second and third terms together, and divide by the first: the answer is £12 13s. 4d. And this fourth term and the other three terms form the following proportion... | |
| Abel Stevens, James Floy - American essays - 1853 - 588 pages
...proportion," and look at his terms with the most awful profundity he pleases, while he runs through his " Multiply the second and third terms together and divide by the first ;" or the merchant glibly chant his " Buy in the cheapest market, and sell in the dearest ;" or the... | |
| 1853 - 782 pages
...Proportion," and look at his terms with the most awful profundity he pleases, while he runs through his " Multiply the second and third terms together and divide by the first ;" or the merchant glibly chant his " Buy in the cheapest market, and sell in the dearest ;" or the... | |
| Thomas Grainger Hall - 1853 - 268 pages
...and second terms to the same denomination ; and the third to the lowest denomination in it. 4. — Multiply the second and third terms together, and divide by the first ; the quotient will be the answer, or fourth term, but will be expressed in the denomination to which... | |
| G. Ainsworth - 1854 - 216 pages
...ах=Ьс, .-. x=—, and this is the algebraical expression for the Rule of Three in arithmetic, which is : Multiply the second and third terms together, and divide by the first. To find a third proportional to two given quantities a, b. As before, let x= the third proportional,... | |
| 1855 - 424 pages
...long time over ' more requiring more and less requiring less ' — ' will you tell me why I sometimes multiply the second and third terms together and divide by the first — and at other times multiply the first and second and divide by the third ¥ ' Why, because more requires... | |
| 1855 - 264 pages
...3. Explain the meaning of the terms ' ratio,' ' proportion ;' and show why in a rule-of-three sum we multiply the second and third terms together, and divide by the first. GEOGRAPHY. SECT. I. — 1. Draw a map of the south-west of England, with names of rivers and chief... | |
| Francis Walkingame - 1855 - 186 pages
...VULGAR FRACTIONS. RULE. State the question as in the corresponding rule for integers (page 41), and then multiply the second and third terms together and divide by the first, according to the methods for multiplying and dividing fractions. Examples. 1. If | of a yard cost $... | |
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