Any car, truck, large bear, or small elephant would. It's only 625 pounds.
Fug
Film
The unit "kilogram" is a measure of mass, not weight, so the mass would still be 10 kg on Mercury.However, a scale on Mercury's surface would show that the 10-kilogram item weighed only 3.8 kilograms, about 38% of its Earth weight.
environmental
The noun 'item' is a word for a thing.The noun 'item' is an abstract noun when it refers to something abstract, for example, an item of interest, an item of gossip, an item of importance, etc.The noun 'item' is a concrete noun when it refers to something concrete, for example, an item of clothing, an item of jewelry, an item on sale, etc.
There is no item on the list of choices that you posted with your question that would be likely to do that.
a baby monkey
about 3
given the two objects are of equal volume, the one with a lower density would would weigh less.
Like so: ounces x 0.0625 = pounds
If you think the item will weigh less, then it's probably best to use grams. If you think it will weigh more, then kilograms would probably be more suitable.
no it does not it weighs the same
It will depend on the specific item being measured. For water it would be pretty much the same. For lead it would be many fewer fluid ounces.
I'm not sure which way you want me to weigh this item.
For measurements involving mass, 16 oz = 1 lb. For fluid ounces, you would need to find the specific gravity of the item being measured to calculate the conversion factor required.
yes
If you are asking how many ounces (mass) of a dry item makes up 1 pound, the answer will always be 16 oz per lb. For fluids (volume), that answer would be different, depending upon the fluid being measured.
a bottle of soda ( 16 ounces)