38 on the new pro points system
I think 20 points per day.
about 30 points
If you weigh 250 lbs. then you should be eating between 25 to 30 points worth of food. Use your points wisely. You can eat more foods with lower points but make sure that they are healthy foods and not junk. Celery with a teaspoon of peanut butter is a good snack to have. Low-fat yogurt made by Light and Fit is good too; low in calories, no trans fat and low in carbs. Good luck with your weight loss.
NutriPex is a Medical Weight Losssupplement distributed by NutriMedical Wellness and Weight Loss Institute. I've had many friends try this now and it has proven to be extremely successful. You lose about a pound a day, and you aren't hungry. Great Stuff.
According to my calculations and the old saying "a pint's a pound the world round" then a quart of cherries would weigh more than a pound of cherries. One pint of cherries would weigh 16 ounces and there are 2 pints in a quart. So one quart of cherries would weigh 32 ounces or 2 pounds. Whereas a pound of cherries weighs 16 ounces. Therefore a quart of cherries is double the weight of a pound of cherries.
I think 20 points per day.
about 30 points
The answer depends on the person's weight on Earth but each pound's weight on Earth would be equivalent to 0.376 pound's weight on Mars.
10000 poundsIf a person weights 100 lbs on earth what would they weight on Saturn ?
Same as if you were "fat". Clean healthy eating, regular cardio and strength training. A pound is a pound is a pound, whether it's on a thin person or a thick person.
The weight gain from food is not determined by the weight of the food, but by the number of calories in food. 3500 calories of food are equal to about one pound of weight (of the person, not the food).
It can speed up your metabolism and make you lose some weight. The exact amount of weight such as a pound will depend on the person.
10
328 lbs
Not really, it's that fewer cells are activated at any given instant.
A person weighing 150 pounds would be equal to 667.2 newtons.
76 pounds or 38% of Earth weight.