A Knight's Tale
it could possibly mean "where"
May, could, could possibly, could plausibly, beyond that you have more complex phrases.
Overdone could possibly replace it. it would depend on the sentence.
You could say, "I'm craving some ice-cream." It just means you are in the mood for something, or really wanting it.
The spelling is "might" (could possibly), e.g. We might go to to the game.
This question is confusing. Could you possibly rephrase it?
This question is confusing. Could you possibly rephrase it?
Using the metric system, a child (and an adult) would be weighed in kilograms. That depends on WHAT property of the child you want to measure. Neither the child's height, nor his age, nor his weight could be measured in grams. But his mass could be.
It could refer to density, where the mass is measured in milligrams and the volume in decilitres. Or It could refer to concentration in a fluid where the mass of the "active" substance is measured in milligrams and the volume of the solution (possibly solute) is measured in decilitres.
Cereal could be weighed on scales, or on a weighbridge while still on the lorry, or measured by volume as in so many sacks.
rubber bands paper clips spices pills underpants (I've never weighed them, but milligrams is about right LOL)
First of all teaspoon is a measurement of volume. Sugar is measured by weight. A teaspoon of sugar could be weighed ob a digital scale.
The "Welcome Stranger" gold nugget measured 61cm by 31cm. Because no scales of the time could actually handle the weight of the nugget, it had to be broken into three pieces by a blacksmith in order to be weighed: it weighed in at over 2300 ounces, or 70 kilograms.
The Welcome Stranger gold nugget, found in Victoria in 1869, measured 61cm by 31cm. No scales of the time could handle the weight of the nugget, so it had to be broken into three pieces by a blacksmith in order to be weighed: it weighed in at over 2300 ounces, or 70 kilograms.
all solid things could be measured
A gallon is a unit of volume. A metric ton is a unit of weight. The two are not mutually related. You would need to know the substance being measured/weighed before that question could be answered.
No, since that is NO weight at all. There have been babies born that weighed less than 1 pound, but none that weighed zero.