No, kg is the abbreviation for kilogram and kilograms, e.g. 1kg, 10kg
One word would be "prince". Add an -s and you have the plural - "princes". Add another -s and you have "princess", a word in singular form.
Not unless you are talking about something that "belongs" to the acronym. To make a word plural, just add s, or in some cases drop the y and add es. But to make acronym plural, just add s.
Add only the s.
Oh, dude, the plural for "kilo" is "kilos." It's like when you have more than one kilo of something, you just add an "s" at the end. So yeah, kilos, man. Easy peasy.
When a family name is pluralized you almost always add -s, unless the name ends in s, x, ch, sh, or z in which case you add -es.
It is a meaningless concept. You cannot add mass to a length.
60 kg-m/s Just took the test
Linear momentum is defined as mv, where m is the mass and v is the velocity. To get the mass, simply add up the 37kg person and the 18kg bicycle. This makes 55 kg total. We multiply this by 1.2 meters per second. This equals 66kgm/s(Kilogram meters per second).
I don't think there is any equivalency.... A watt isW = J/s = (N*m)/s = ((kg*(m/s^2))*m)/s = kg*(m^2))/(s^3)Therefore: W*kg = (kg^2)*((m^2)/(s^3)) which is not equal to N = kg*(m/s^2)I guess the closest answer would be :1 kg*W = (1 kg*m/s) N or1 kg*W = (1 N*s) N
= 1 kg 1 kg = 1000 grams 1 gram = 0.001 kg
First fill the 17 kg jug from the tap, pour into the 19 kg jug. Fill again the 17 kg jug from the tap and add to the 19 kg jug until full. This will leave 15 kg in the 17 kg jug. Pour out (throw away) content of the 19 kg jug and now again add contents from the 17 kg jug into 19 kg jug (remember this is 15 kg). Now fill from the tap the 17 kg jug. When you fill up the 19 kg jug from the 17 kg jug you will add to the 15 kg there 4 kg more so now you have 13 kg left in the 17 kg jug. Good luck.
36
13 stones is 82.5 kg and add 4.1 kg for 9 pounds so its 86.6 kg.
double and add 10%
0.6 kg
The momentum of a 1400 kg car traveling at 25 m/s is: momentum = mass x velocity momentum = 1400 kg x 25 m/s momentum = 35,000 kg m/s Therefore, the momentum of the 1400 kg car traveling at 25 m/s is 35,000 kg m/s
(4 kg)*(2 m/s) = 8 kg•m/s