Project Gutenberg's Amusements in Mathematics, by Henry Ernest Dudeney
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Title: Amusements in Mathematics
Author: Henry Ernest Dudeney
Release Date: September 17, 2005 [EBook #16713]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMUSEMENTS IN MATHEMATICS ***
Produced by Stephen Schulze, Jonathan Ingram and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
[Transcribers note: Many of the puzzles in this book assume a
familiarity with the currency of Great Britain in the early 1900s. As
this is likely not common knowledge for those outside Britain (and
possibly many within,) I am including a chart of relative values.
The most common units used were:
the Penny, abbreviated: d. (from the Roman penny, denarius)
the Shilling, abbreviated: s.
the Pound, abbreviated: L
There was 12 Pennies to a Shilling and 20 Shillings to a Pound, so there
was 240 Pennies in a Pound.
To further complicate things, there were many coins which were various
fractional values of Pennies, Shillings or Pounds.
Farthing 1/4d.
Half-penny 1/2d.
Penny 1d.
Three-penny 3d.
Sixpence (or tanner) 6d.
Shilling (or bob) 1s.
Florin or two shilling piece 2s.
Half-crown (or half-dollar) 2s. 6d.
Double-florin 4s.
Crown (or dollar) 5s.
Half-Sovereign 10s.
Sovereign (or Pound) L1 or 20s.
This is by no means a comprehensive list, but it should be adequate to
solve the puzzles in this book.
Exponents are represented in this text by ^, e.g. '3 squared' is 3^2.
Numbers with fractional components (other than 1/4, 1/2 and 3/4) have a +
symbol separating the whole number component from the fraction. It makes
the fraction look odd, but yeilds correct solutions no matter how it is
interpreted. E.G., 4 and eleven twenty-thirds is 4+11/23, not 411/23 or
4-11/23.
]
AMUSEMENTS IN MATHEMATICS
by
HENRY ERNEST DU
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