No, it is a unit of mass.
No, gram is a unit of mass; the unit of force is newton.
Force is measured in newton. Gram is a unit of mass, not of force.Force is measured in newton. Gram is a unit of mass, not of force.Force is measured in newton. Gram is a unit of mass, not of force.Force is measured in newton. Gram is a unit of mass, not of force.
No, the gram is used for small weights, even though the gram is a mass unit, not a force unit or weight unit.
The CGS unit of weight (no longer used) was the gram
the gram is a unit of mass.
Any unit of force that appeals to you.The "pound-force" (usually called simply the "pound") and the "newton" are the most popular. Note: The "gram" and the "kilogram" are NOT units of force.
The cgs unit of force is the dyne. One dyne is equal to the force required to accelerate a one gram mass by one centimeter per second squared.
The gram is an SI unit. However, the SI base unit is the kilogram, not the gram.
The Newton (N) is the SI unit for force. The gram (g) - or rather kilo (kg) is the unit for mass. At ground level on Earth the weight (force with which gravity pulls a) 1 kg (= 1000 g) towards the Earth is about 9.81 Newton
The SI unit of the gram is the measure of mass. It is the basis for the units that measure force (Newton) and work (Joule).
The international standard unit for weight is the GramAnswerNo, the international (SI) unit for weight which, of course, is the force due to gravity, is the newton. The kilogram (not gram!) is the SI base unit for mass, not force.
no its not. gram = unit of mass. milliliter= unit of volume. entirely different measures