It depends on its material. In other words its density.
The volume of 1 pound of air can vary depending on the temperature, pressure, and density of the air. At standard temperature and pressure (STP) conditions of 0 degrees Celsius and 1 atmosphere pressure, the volume of 1 pound of air is approximately 13.1 cubic feet. However, if the air is at a different temperature or pressure, you would need to use the ideal gas law equation (PV = nRT) to calculate the volume.
There are 16 ounces in a pound. This is the same for a pound of water, lead, mud.........anything.
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.
Liter is a measure of volume and pound is a measure of weight, so it depends on the density of that material.
The volume of 1 cm³ of water is equal to 1 milliliter, as 1 cm³ is equivalent to 1 mL. The mass of 1 cm³ of water is approximately 1 gram, as the density of water is 1 g/mL. This relationship between volume and mass is due to the density of water being close to 1 g/mL at room temperature and standard pressure.
It displaces 1 pound of water in terms of its mass, if you were to convert to volume, it is a simple conversion with any mass, water has a density of 1 meaning that 1kg of water takes up 1 litre of volume, so, a 1 pound fish roughly displaces 455mL of water.
1 tablespoon is about 1/32 of a pound.
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.
In a pound of what? Fluid ounces is a measure of volume. Pound is a measure of weight. The number of fluid ounces in a pound is going to depend on the density of the substance in question. A pound of mercury is much smaller in volume (and thus has fewer fluid ounces) than a pound of water. If we are speaking of water, or something equivalent, 1 ounce of water by weight fills up one fluid ounce of space, so a pound of water (16 oz) is 16 fluid ounces, or 1 pint.
It depends on what you a measuring, for water it would be 2. Cups is a measure of volume. Pounds is a measure of weight and mass. You can not directly convert the two.
Water has a density of about 1 gram per milliliter, while liquid chocolate is denser and usually weighs around 1.5 to 2 times more than water for the same volume. So, liquid chocolate will be heavier than water for an equivalent volume.
That kind of depends. How big are your cups?
Ice and water are identical in mass. (However, they have different densities and thus are different by volume, but we are not concerned with any volumes of ice so ignore this fact.) Density of water = 1.0 g/mL 1 lb = 16 oz 16 oz (28 g/oz) = 448 g 448 g (1 mL / 1 g) = 448 mL 448 mL (0.033814 fl oz./mL) = 15.15 fl oz. 1 pound of ice/water is slightly less than 1 pint of water.
1 pound of soda ash is equal to approximately 2 cups in volume.
1 pound of water is about 32 tablespoons.
1 pound of water is about 32 tablespoons.
15.35 fluid ounces of water weigh one pound. A fluid ounce of water weighs 1.0425 avoirdupois ounces (weight). Or, 0.9592 av oz (weight) of water equals 1 fluid oz (volume). Formulas: 1 pound (16 av oz) / 1.0425 av oz per fluid oz = 15.35 fluid oz. 1 pound (16 av oz) * .9592 fluid oz per av oz = 15.35 fluid oz. (rounded) Check: 15.35 fluid oz * 1.0425 av oz per fluid oz = 16 (rounded) av oz (1 pound). So... Techniccly 16 oz = 1 lb