No! You can not define weight in terms of weight. When you define anything in terms of itself, you do not have a definition, you have a tautology. Such is not science but scientism. It is a fraud. One definition could be the attractive force two masses exert when they attract each other.
The weight of an object is the force of gravity.
weight, The weight of an object is the force of gravity acting on it.
Weight = Mass * Acceleration of gravity. Weight = force of gravity on particular object. Weight = force of gravity on an object; Gravity = attracts all objects toward each other
The mutual force with which every two masses attract each other because of gravity is referred to as the "weight" of the objects.
The force of gravity between the Earth and an object on its surface is what we call the object's "weight". What is not generally appreciated is that the object attracts the Earth toward it with the same force. This means that whatever your weight is on Earth, it's the same as the Earth's weight on you.
force of gravity
The force of gravity on an object is called its weight.Note that mass is what CAUSES this force of gravity.
The weight of an object is the force with which gravity (usually, Earth's gravity) attracts it. Weight is measured in units of force; in SI units, this is the Newton.
No. The force of gravity acting on an object's mass is weight.
An object's weight
its weight
Weight