No.
lbs is a weight (mass) volume is 3 dimensional measurement (space). One has nothing to do with the other. Like asking how does yellow sound...
5.00 cm is a length measurement, not a mass measurement. You need to know the mass and volume of an object to find density. Density = mass/volume.
You can't directly convert a measurement of volume to a measurement of weight without a defined substance you are measuring, as certain substances are heavier per quart than others.
No, it measures volume, ie. cubic feet. Milligram is the measurement, .ie pounds.
No, it's a measurement of weight.
Cubic units measure volume.
pounds is a measurement of weight. gallon is a measurement of volume
There are no Quarts in pounds pounds are a measurement of weight and uarts are a measurement of volume.
A measurement of 179 cubic inches has no direct equivalent in pounds. Cubic inches measure volume while pounds measure weight.
Pounds are a measurement of weight and liters are a volume so it would depend on the weight of the item by the amount of it.
They are all forms of weight and volume measurement.
"cubit feet" is nonsense; there's no such measurement. "cubic feet" is a valid unit of measurement, but it's a volume measurement and cannot be converted into pounds, a weight measurement.
5.00 cm is a length measurement, not a mass measurement. You need to know the mass and volume of an object to find density. Density = mass/volume.
A measurement of 179 cubic inches has no direct equivalent in pounds. Cubic inches measure volume while pounds measure weight.
Liters is a measurement of volume, while pounds is a measurement of weight. They aren't directly comparable, unless you specify what is being measured. One liter is defined as being the volume of one kilogram of pure water, which is approximately equal to 2.2 pounds, so 76 liters of water would be about 168 pounds.
volume in measurement meANS HOW MUCH SOMETHING CONTAINS.
Density is measured in units of Mass/Volume (e.g. g/cc, kg/cubic meter, pounds/cubic foot).
the measurement is volume