1 cc of water
One American dollar bill weighs in at about 1 gram, although it won't be exactly that.
some things that might be measured in grams are liquids, pills, and weight.
Ligers
A grape comes in several sizes, degrees of juiciness, and so on. So while some grapes may weigh 1 gram, it is too vague a measurement.
A 10 pound weight
Do you mean $40's worth of Cocaine? If it is, probably Just a gram or maybe little less. And If your getting it for $40 a gram that means that stuff your buying is not legit, probably cut and laced with different things. Maybe some Zanax bars or probably Vitamin B12. No one can get $40 grams for real cocaine, that's insane.
This will depend on the material that is used. Some use more or heavier metal to make so they would weigh more.
Only if you have pure water in mind: 50 milliliters of pure water weigh 50 gram.
The mass is equal to the weight (both in grams) but different insects vary greatly in weight depending on species and age. Some weigh a tiny fraction of a gram, while very large bugs can weigh 10 grams or more.
An adult elephant can weigh around 15,000 pounds. A blue whale is the largest animal on Earth today and the tongue of one of these animals can weigh more than a fully grown elephant. An adult blue whale can weigh between 200,000 and 300,000 pounds. Another animal that can outweigh an adult elephant is the whale shark which can grow to weigh 26,000 pounds.
A "litre" can weigh different amounts depending on what the litre is comprised of. For example, a litre of water will weigh more than a litre of chocolate mousse (more air in the mousse, but I admit the example's odd)... If you then dissolve a lot of sugar in the litre of water, it will weigh more than it did previously (the volume will also increase a little, some will have to be poured out to retain "1 litre", but it will not weigh what it did originally). So it is not possible to know how much of a litre weighs a gram without knowing what substance the litre is comprised of.
what are some of the reasons for a gram-variable reaction