The elements of Euclid, explained and demonstrated in a new and most easie method with the uses of each proposition in all the parts of the mathematicks / by Claude Francois Milliet D'Chales, a Jesuit ; done out of French, corrected and augmented, and illustrated with nine copper plates, and the effigies of Euclid, by Reeve Williams ...

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Title
The elements of Euclid, explained and demonstrated in a new and most easie method with the uses of each proposition in all the parts of the mathematicks / by Claude Francois Milliet D'Chales, a Jesuit ; done out of French, corrected and augmented, and illustrated with nine copper plates, and the effigies of Euclid, by Reeve Williams ...
Author
Dechales, Claude-François Milliet, 1621-1678.
Publication
London :: Printed for Philip Lea ...,
1685.
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Subject terms
Geometry -- Early works to 1800.
Mathematical analysis.
Cite this Item
"The elements of Euclid, explained and demonstrated in a new and most easie method with the uses of each proposition in all the parts of the mathematicks / by Claude Francois Milliet D'Chales, a Jesuit ; done out of French, corrected and augmented, and illustrated with nine copper plates, and the effigies of Euclid, by Reeve Williams ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A38722.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 29, 2024.

Pages

USE.

A   43
C 40. 3
B,   3
120.   9.
129    
THis Proposition serveth likewise to Demonstrate the ordinary practice of Mul∣tiplication. For Example, if one would Multiply the Number 43 by 3, having se∣parated the Number of 43 into two parts in 40, and 3; three times 43 shall be as much as three times 3, which is Nine, the Square of Three; and Three times Forty, which is 120; for 129 is Three Times 43. Those which are young beginners ought not to be discouraged,

Page 105

if they do not conceive immediately these Propositions, for they are not difficult, but because they do imagine they contain some great Mystery.

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