| George Adams - Astronomy - 1812 - 552 pages
...said to be NE. In long voyages, a ship's way may consist of a great number of different courses, as from A to B, from B to C, and from C to D, plate 13, Jig. 9; when we speak of a ship's course, we consider one of these at a time; the seldomer... | |
| George Adams - Astronomy - 1812 - 586 pages
...said to be NE In long voyages, a ship's way may consist of a great number of different courses, as from A to B, from B to C, and from C to D, plate 1 3, fig. 9 ; when xve speak of a ship's course, we consider one of these at a time; the seldomer... | |
| Royal Irish Academy - Ireland - 1837 - 644 pages
...moment A. In like manner, if three successive steps » bc have conducted successively (in thought) from A to B, from B to c, and from c to D, and therefore ultimately and upon the whole from A to D, we may consider this total transition from... | |
| Royal Irish Academy - 1837 - 642 pages
...original moment A. In like manner, if three successive steps abc have conducted successively (in thought) from A to B, from B to c, and from c to D, and therefore ultimately and upon the whole from A to D, we may consider this total transition from... | |
| John Charles Snowball - Hydrostatics - 1838 - 114 pages
...CA (not AC) is the third; so that in describing the forces we proceed regularly round the triangle, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to A again. Then AD is parallel and equal to BC, and will therefore properly represent in magnitude and... | |
| Richard Green Parker - Astronomy - 1839 - 262 pages
...otuer part of its orbit, •nd will cause the earth to move rapidly. But in its motion irom E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to F, the attraction of the sun, operating in an opposite direction, will cause its motion from the s'unTobe... | |
| Henry Austin Oram - Arithmetic - 1841 - 114 pages
...order in the same straight 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? 37. From London to Edinburgh is 399 miles, from London to Newcastle is 278 miles, and from York to... | |
| Richard Green Parker - 1844 - 276 pages
...aay otner part of its orbit, and will cause the earth to move rapidly. But in its motion from E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to F, the attraction of the sun, operating in an oppusite direction, will cause its motion from the sun... | |
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