 | Jeremiah Day - 1814 - 303 páginas
...Algebra, Sec. IV. Maclau jin. Saunderaon, Lacroix, Ludlam. 90. Multiplying bi/ a whole number is taking the multiplicand as many times, as there are units in the multiplier.* Multiplying by 1, is taking the multiplicand once, as a. Multiplying by 2, is taking the multiplicand... | |
 | Bézout - 1825 - 236 páginas
...idea which we have given of multiplication, we see that we could perform this operation by writing the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier, and afterward performing the addition. For instance, to multiply 7 by 3, we could write 7 + 7 + 7,... | |
 | Roswell Chamberlain Smith - 1826 - 107 páginas
...a fraction? for doubtless it has appeared rather strange. In multiplying by a whole number we take the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier; and in multiplying by one then, how many times do you take the multiplicand! Ans. 1. Give an example... | |
 | B. M. Tyler - 1827 - 287 páginas
...answer by adding ; but when the multiplier is a large number, it would be very tedious to set down the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier, and be obliged to add them up. This shows the great utility of multiplication. 8. What is the price... | |
 | Roswell Chamberlain Smith - 1827 - 196 páginas
...fraction, for doubtless it has appeared rather strange. In multiplying by a whole number, we talte the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier ; and in multiplying by one then ; how many times do you take the multiplicand ? A. 1. Give an example.... | |
 | William Ruger - 1832 - 263 páginas
...to the left. SUPPLEMENT TO MULTIPLICATION. Multiplying by a mixed number, as 6J, 5J, &c. is taking the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier ; and likewise taking a part of the multiplicand as many times as there are like portions of a unit... | |
 | Charles Davies - 1833 - 270 páginas
...how many times the multiplicand is to be repeated, is called the multiplier. The number arising from repeating the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier, is called the product. § -29. The multiplicand and multiplier are factors, or producers, of the product.... | |
 | Lyman Cobb - 1834 - 108 páginas
...amount, several times repeated, may be accomplished by Addition ; first, by writing down the figures of the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier, in a column, and adding them up. But the end is attained much more quickly, more pleasantly, and with... | |
 | Jeremiah Day - 1835 - 332 páginas
...calculations, there is frequent occasion forfnultiplication, division, involution, &c. But how, it may be asked, can geometrical quantities be multiplied into...factors, in multiplication, is always to be considered as & number. (Art. 91.) The operation consists in repeating the multiplicand as many times as there are... | |
 | Charles Davies - 1835 - 353 páginas
...b). MULTIPLICATION. 40. Algebraic multiplication has the same object as arithmetical, viz. to repeat the multiplicand as many times as there are units in the multiplier. It is generally proved, in arithmetical treaties, that the product of two or more numbers is the same,... | |
| |