Your weight, or the weight registered on the scale? Your weight will increase by one pound, but the weight registered on the scale will remain the same. If you stand on the scale, note your weight, pick up the water (using a very light, perhaps paper cup), note the weight after you are holding the water, and then drink, and put down the cup, you will see what happens.
Try a gallon of water.
Water will stay the same weight when it is frozen, it still has the same molecules that it started with
Weight doesn't tell you the volume. One pound of air, one pound of water, and one pound of gold all have vastly different volumes.
Yes it does
The weight of 2 pounds of water is just that--2 pounds. Pound is a unit of weight (or, more formally, force).
They are both the same weight. a pound is a pound. only the densiyys are different. oli is less dense.
One once is 1/16th of a pound.
The amount of water needed to float a ship depends on factors such as the weight and size of the ship, as well as the density of the water. A ship displaces an amount of water equal to its weight, so it will float as long as it displaces its weight in water.
On average, approximately 60% of a person's body weight is water. So for a 180-pound person, you would calculate 60% of 180 to find that about 108 pounds of that person's weight is water.
The adult male is 65 % water, the adult female is 55% water.
No, but maybe it will help you spell.