 , through x and perpendicular
to the x-axis, is A(x), where A is a continuous function, then the volume
of S is
 , through x and perpendicular
to the x-axis, is A(x), where A is a continuous function, then the volume
of S is
  
 
For a solid of revolution, the trick is to compute the radius r(x) (or, sometimes to ``confuse you'', r(y)), and rove over the appropriate axis.
This is a step up from computing areas: we're now computing volumes, by adding up little chunks of volume in the form A(x)dx (area times depth). The conceptual idea is the same, obviously, but we're in higher dimension.
Problems to consider: pp. 387-389, #1, 9, 12, 21, 22, 43, 46, 48,
59; on the board: #2, 20, 45