The tsetse fly typically weighs between 2 to 4 milligrams. This small insect is known for its role as a vector for trypanosomiasis, also known as sleeping sickness, in humans and Nagana in animals. Despite its minimal weight, the tsetse fly has significant ecological and health impacts in regions where it is found.
weight fly sand
a fly is not an element so it does not have an "atomic" weight. It does have a mass or weight however
The words weight, fly and sand have "fly" in common, because together they can form other words. Their direct relationship is: fly, fly weight, and sand fly.
An airplane produces enogh lift to fly with weight. Cargo planes are designed to do that.
No. A fly hovering above you doesn't make you feel heavier does it? Although you probably would'NT feel it anyway.
Paper is what weight, fly, and sand have in common. Paperweight, flypaper, and sandpaper is how paper is common for all of them.
It is a weight that you put on papers so they fly around.
Just adding weight will not make a paper airplane fly farther. However, adding weight in exactly the right places can make it fly farther, by improving its balance and stability.
The weight will move, but, it won't "fly" in the traditional meaning of the word.
The words weight, fly, and sand are all nouns. The words can all be used as the subject in a sentence.
A boxer that can fly-a-weight, get it?!?!?!?!
They didn't. They are fictional.