Page:The Algebra of Mohammed Ben Musa (1831).djvu/34

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over, the line K L, which has been. cut off from K M, is equal to K G; consequently, the quadrangle M R is equal to T A. Thus it is evident that the quadrangle H T, augmented by the quadrangle M R, is equal to the quadrangle H B, which represents the twenty-one. The whole quadrate M T was found to be equal to twenty-five. If we now subtract from this quadrate, M T, the quadrangles H T and M R, which are equal to twenty-one, there remains a small quadrate K R, which represents the difference between twenty-five and twenty-one. This is four; and its root, represented by the line R G, which is equal to G A, is two. If you (13) subtract this number two from the line C G, which is the moiety of the roots, then the remainder is the line A C; that is to say, three, which is the root of the original square. But if you add the number two to the line C G, which is the moiety of the number of the roots, then the sum is seven, represented by the line C R, which is the root to a larger square. However, if you add twenty-one to this square, then the sum will likewise be equal to ten roots of the same square. Here is the figure:—