Page:The Algebra of Mohammed Ben Musa (1831).djvu/139

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one-fifth of this remainder; there remain four dirhems, less four-fifths of a share. Now deduct the second dirhem, and you retain three dirhems, less four-fifths of a share. You know, therefore, that the legacy which was determined by one-fourth, is three dirhems, less four-fifths of a share. Return now to the one-third, which is eight, and subtract from it three dirhems, (91) less four-fifths of a share. There remain five dirhems, less four-fifths of a share. Subtract also one-fourth of this and one dirhem, for the legacy; you then retain two dirhems and three-fourths, less three-fifths of a share. Take now one-eighth of the capital, namely, three; after the deduction of one-third, you retain one-fourth of a dirhem, less three-fifths of a share. Return now to the two-thirds, namely, sixteen, and subtract from them one-fourth of a dirhem less three-fifths of a share; there remain of the capital fifteen dirhems and three-fourths, less three-fifths of a share, which are equal to eight shares. Reduce this, by removing three-fifths of a share, and adding them to the shares, which are eight. Then you have fifteen dirhems and three-fourths, equal to eight shares and three-fifths. Make the division: the quotient is one share of the whole capital, which is twenty-four (dirhems). Every daughter receives one dirhem and one-hundred-and-forty-three one-hundred-and-seventy-second parts of a dirhem.[1]


  1. of the capital of a dirhem. If we assume