| James Ferguson - 1764 - 322 pages
...no more than ii f 29° 31' 49", which wants 28' u" of being as nearly in conjunction with the fame node at the end of the period as it was at the beginning; this pejiod cannot 3 be « " • v ' . - " The period. Moon fr. fun. Sun fr. node. 8 O ' // SO//' • *... | |
| James Ferguson - Celestial globes - 1814 - 520 pages
...in thai time, the sun's mean motion from the node is no more than 11s 29° 3V 49'', which wants 2& 11" of being as nearly in conjunction with the same node at the end of the period as it was at the be. ginning, this period cannot be of constant duration for finding eclipses, because it will in time... | |
| James Ferguson - Astronomy - 1839 - 554 pages
...that time, the sun's mean motion from the node is no more than Ha 29° 31' 49", which wants 8' 21 1" of being as nearly in conjunction with the same node...quite without their limits. The following tables make thU period 31 seconds shorter, as appears by the following calculation. XIL The period. Moon fr. son.... | |
| George Ticknor - Spanish literature - 1849 - 586 pages
...form of verse, or likely to tolerate it on any important subject. Didactic poetry remained, therefore, at the end of the period, as it was at the beginning, one of the feeblest and least successful departments of the national literature.33 33 The shorter poems,... | |
| Accounting - 1906 - 944 pages
...and another, yet over a period of five or ten years the chances axe that the plant is as efficient at the end of the period as it was at the beginning, taken as a whole ; which is another way of saying that over <a. long period no depreciation need be... | |
| Charles Frederick Remer - China - 1926 - 304 pages
...China during the period from 1871 to 1884 shows that the total trade of the country was about the same at the end of the period as it was at the beginning. This conclusion is the [result of the observation of the total trade as measured in Haikwan taels. This... | |
| Gustav Cassel - Business & Economics - 1928 - 130 pages
...by British index figures, representing for the whole period gold prices, was almost exactly the same at the end of the period as it was at the beginning. Thus the annual increase of 2.8 per cent represents for the said period a normal increase, in the sense... | |
| Phyllis Deane - Business & Economics - 1979 - 332 pages
...been more important than changes in price relatives and that the structure of prices was much the same at the end of the period as it was at the beginning. Otherwise indeed it would be difficult to decide which set of prices to use. In effect, if there is... | |
| Dan Usher - Study Aids - 2008 - 570 pages
...— of what can be consumed during the period of measurement while still leaving society as well off at the end of the period as it was at the beginning. For. at least with perfect elasticity of substitution between capital goods and consumer goods over... | |
| Peter S. Onuf - History - 1991 - 476 pages
...the trade, though there were ups and downs in key articles, fluctuated little and was about the same at the end of the period as it was at the beginning. Second, the trade with the West Indies greatly exceeded the direct trade with the mother country. And... | |
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