In metric measurement the prefix Kilo~ means one thousand.
Adapted from a Wikipedia article: k is short for "kilo", and that is derived from a Greek word meaning "thousand". The prefix "kilo" was originally adopted by Antoine Lavoisier and his group in 1795, and introduced into the metric system in France with its establishment in 1799.Adapted from a Wikipedia article: k is short for "kilo", and that is derived from a Greek word meaning "thousand". The prefix "kilo" was originally adopted by Antoine Lavoisier and his group in 1795, and introduced into the metric system in France with its establishment in 1799.Adapted from a Wikipedia article: k is short for "kilo", and that is derived from a Greek word meaning "thousand". The prefix "kilo" was originally adopted by Antoine Lavoisier and his group in 1795, and introduced into the metric system in France with its establishment in 1799.Adapted from a Wikipedia article: k is short for "kilo", and that is derived from a Greek word meaning "thousand". The prefix "kilo" was originally adopted by Antoine Lavoisier and his group in 1795, and introduced into the metric system in France with its establishment in 1799.
That probably refers to the SI prefixes, such as kilo (meaning 1000), mega (meaning a million), milli (meaning 1/1000), etc.
it is obviously the same weight because it say KILO for both!
kilo means thousand
They are both 1 Kilo. So, no.
When the metric system was created, the inventors used the Greek word for 1000, kilo, as the prefix meaning 1000. They used the Latin word for 1000, mill, as the prefix meaning 1/1000.
'Kilo' is derived from a Greek word meaning thousand.
In math Kilo is the metric prefix meaning 1000 times.
1000 1000
The prefix kilo- means one thousand.
2,500g, k being short for kilo, and kilo meaning "multiply by 1000"
"kilo"
KL
Kilo- is the prefix meaning 1000 times whatever it's prefixing, and it is abbreviated k.
Yes, it is a prefix meaning a thousand.
K stands for kilo, prefix meaning 1000
Kilo comes from the Greek khiloi and means, curiously enough, 1000. It is interesting enough, the onlyprefix with a direct numerical meaning.