The Accomplished Tutor; Or, Complete System of Liberal Education:: Containing the Most Improved Theory and Practice of the Following Subjects: 1. English Grammar, and Elocution. 2. Penmanship, and Short Hand. 3. Arithmetic, Vulgar and Decimal ... 18. Drawing, Engraving, and Painting. And Other Useful Matter. Embellished with Twenty Copper-plates and Six Maps, Neatly Engraved, Volum 2H. D. Symonds, Paternoster Row; and Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe, Poultry., 1806 - 458 sider |
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Resultat 1-5 av 23
Side 11
... last term of the quantity , and for all the other terms substitute any single term . These two terms being raised to the required power , the answer will be obtained by repla- cing , instead of the substituted term , the proper value ...
... last term of the quantity , and for all the other terms substitute any single term . These two terms being raised to the required power , the answer will be obtained by repla- cing , instead of the substituted term , the proper value ...
Side 22
... last equation , is z + 100 = 1800-24x + 3 % -300 , that is ≈ + 100 1400 = 1500-21 % ; wherefore 22x = 1400 , or 2 = = 637x : 22 therefore , y = 300-4x = 4511 , and x = y + z — 100 = 9πr • of Of the Nature and Compofition of Equations ...
... last equation , is z + 100 = 1800-24x + 3 % -300 , that is ≈ + 100 1400 = 1500-21 % ; wherefore 22x = 1400 , or 2 = = 637x : 22 therefore , y = 300-4x = 4511 , and x = y + z — 100 = 9πr • of Of the Nature and Compofition of Equations ...
Side 26
... last example . To multiply or divide the Roots of any Equation , by a given Quantity . RULE . Multiply or divide any new letter by the given number , and fubftitute its powers in the equation for the unknown quantity . X EXAMPLE ...
... last example . To multiply or divide the Roots of any Equation , by a given Quantity . RULE . Multiply or divide any new letter by the given number , and fubftitute its powers in the equation for the unknown quantity . X EXAMPLE ...
Side 28
... term of the equation away , as taught in the last example ; then the equation will be in this form , x3 + ax = b , and the following general expreffion will give the value of x . Ya 62 62 + √ + ~ 4 There are E 2 OF ALGEBRA . 27.
... term of the equation away , as taught in the last example ; then the equation will be in this form , x3 + ax = b , and the following general expreffion will give the value of x . Ya 62 62 + √ + ~ 4 There are E 2 OF ALGEBRA . 27.
Side 29
... last in the equation , including all the powers of the last v , but reject- ing those of the new ( in the equation , thence arifing ) , as before . - Thus , in the last example , the whole equation , including the terms affected with 2 ...
... last in the equation , including all the powers of the last v , but reject- ing those of the new ( in the equation , thence arifing ) , as before . - Thus , in the last example , the whole equation , including the terms affected with 2 ...
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The Accomplished Tutor; Or, Complete System of Liberal Education ..., Volum 2 Thomas Hodson Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1806 |
The Accomplished Tutor: Or, Complete System of Liberal Education: Containing ... Thomas Hodson Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2016 |
The Accomplished Tutor: Or, Complete System of Liberal Education: Containing ... Thomas Hodson Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2016 |
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Populære avsnitt
Side 8 - 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.
Side 273 - The wedge is a very great mechanical power, since not only wood, but even rocks, can be split by it ; which it would be impossible to effect by the lever, wheel, and axle, or pulley ; for the force of the blow, or stroke, shakes the cohering parts, and thereby makes them separate more easily.
Side 267 - A lever of the fecond kind has the weight between the prop and the power. In this, as well as the former, the advantage gained is as the diftance of the power from the prop to the diftance of the weight from the prop : for the...
Side 321 - ... of its sails move against the air when it turns round. In each axle is a fine pin near the middle of the frame, which goes quite through the axle, and stands out a little on each side of it...
Side 328 - When foul weather happens soon after the falling of the mercury expect but little of it ; and on the contrary, expect but little fair weather when it proves fair shortly after the mercury has risen.
Side 275 - As the distance between the body to be raised, or balanced, and the fulcrum, or prop, is to the distance between the prop and the point where the power is applied, so is the power to the weight which it will balance.
Side 360 - The horizontal distance to which a fluid will spout from a horizontal pipe in any part of the side of an upright vessel, below the surface of the fluid, is equal to twice the length of a perpendicular to the side of the vessel, drawn from the mouth of the pipe to a semicircle described upon the altitude of the fluid : and therefore the...
Side 343 - He first established the truth that a body plunged in a fluid loses as much of its weight as is equal to the weight of an equal volume of the fluid it displaces.
Side 274 - If the line g, instead of going round the groove e of the wheel D, goes round its axle I, the power of the machine will be as much...
Side 323 - ... of the bladder be overcome by the weight of the air; and then it will break with a report as loud as that of a gun.— If a flat piece of glafs be laid upon the open top of this receiver, and joined to it by a flat ring of wet leather between them; upon pumping the air out of the receiver, the prefibre of the outward air upon the flat glafs will break it all to pieces.