Not in any realistic or healthy way. 2-4 lbs/week is about the recommended loss rate to remain healthy.
7,000 ÷ 250 = 28 weeks.(Proof: 28 × 250 = 7,000)
No, you cannot lose 2 stone (28 pounds) in five days by any natural means.
To lose 2 stone (28 pounds) in 5 weeks, you would need to focus on exercise every day and eating healthy. Carbohydrates and dairy may hinder weight loss if not done in moderation.
Two pounds is heavier than 28 ounces because two pounds is 32 ounces.
The number of miles a person must run to lose 35 pounds in 5 weeks depends a lot on the size of the person and the speed at which you run. Running at the fairly moderate pace of 5 MPH, a person who weighs 165 pounds will burn about 126 calories. You need to burn 3500 calories to lose one pound. This means that you'd need to run almost 28 miles in 5 weeks to lose one pound, and 35 times that, or about 972 miles, to lose 25 pounds. However, running will increase your overall metabolism so you won't actually need this many miles, and if you cut some calories out of your diet you will lose weight faster.
There are 14 days in two weeks which would mean 28 different states could be visited in two weeks.
98,000 calories; there are 3,500 in a pound, so 3,500 x 28 is 98,000
The Rebel - 1959 Two Weeks 2-28 was released on: USA: 26 March 1961
28 pounds is a lot of weight to lose in such a short space of time. I joined my local slimming class and even thought I was losing between 4 and 5 pounds a week I still wasn't going to shed enough weight in time for a birthday party I had been invited too. I tried thewww.weightmoves.com diet program and lost 25 pounds which was great. I suppose it's a quick fix diet but it worked for me at the time. I'm now back at my slimming class and have managed to keep the weight off.
you dont need to lose weight if yiour only 90 pounds and it depends, any type of exersize will help.
A decimal is a way to represent a number. It has nothing to do with volumes or masses. So 28, in decimal is 28 - whether it is ounces, or litres, or pounds, or kilograms, or weeks!
No, because two pounds equals 32 ounces.