it will depend completly on the specific pound of chicken you use. You can find the density by finding the volume it takes up in Litres. Then divide the pound by the volume, this creates a value for denstiy in pounds/litre.
It depends on its material. In other words its density.
Liter is a measure of volume and pound is a measure of weight, so it depends on the density of that material.
That's going to depend on what substance you have a pound of. 1 pound of air . . . several liters 1 pound of water . . . about 0.454 of one liter 1 pound of gold . . . only about 0.024 of one liter Correction: There actually aren't any litres in a pound, no matter what you're measuring. It would be interesting to know why the question is being asked however. It seems to be quite a common question, and I think a lot of these are from students wanting us respondents to do their homework for them! It shows a good many people are very unclear of the basics of mass, volume and density, so when faced with an Imperial - Metric conversion they muddle the units.
1 pound is 453,590 mg
1 pound
Calories in one pound of chickenIn cooked and raw examples of whole chicken and ground chicken there are:approx 736-752 calories in 1 pound (16 ounces) of roast/grilled chicken breastapprox 848- 912 calories in 1 pound (16 ounces) of dark meat such as legapprox 640 calories in 1 pound or 454g of raw ground chickenapprox 848 calories in 1 pound or 454g of cooked/pan browned ground chicken.For the calorie content of vegetables or fruit to serve with chicken, and fruit and vegetable calorie charts,which you may use as daily guides, see the page links, further down this page, listed under Related Questions.
1 pound of chicken breast contains about 1 gram of carbohydrates
16 ounces16 ounces in a pound of anything.
A pound.
The density of ground beef is: 950 Kg/cubic meter To put that into a more useful volume (i.e., for cooking with ground beef), ground beef is approximately: 2 lbs/quart (1.98 lbs/1quart). See this web site for an answer. http://www.tian.cc/2005/03/weight-estimation.html
I had the same question and found this info online. The last line is what helped me the most. Hope that helps! Chicken, bone-in breast, cooked, cubed 1 pound (2 medium) = 1 1/2 cups (1 cup = .67 pound)Chicken, skinless, boneless breast, cooked, cubed .60 pound (2 medium) = 1 1/2 cups (1 cup = .40 pound)4 1/2 cups = 3 pound chicken, cooked/dicedChicken 3/4 pound boned 2 cups cooked and diced2 cups cooked, cubed chicken = 1 1/2 pounds chicken breasts
5 pounds = 2 kg and 1 kg is equal to 1000 grams 1 pound = 400 grams
1/2 pound of chicken would contain 1-3 pieces, depending on the size and type of chicken. If it were a breast, it would probably be 1 piece. You would probably get 2-3 legs or thighs in 1/2 pound of chicken.
1 pound of ground ham will be equal to 2 cups.
That depends on whether you mean cooked or uncooked chicken. It also depends on the weight of the chicken. For the calories in chicken by weight, please see the page links, further down this page, listed under Related Questions. Alternatively, please feel free to ask the question again and include more detail.
1 Pound
ANSWER you need to know the density of your foodstuff. f.e. pound of salt will be 1 1/2 cups, but pound of semolina will be 2 1/2 cups approximately.