The number of apples in 1 pound can vary depending on the size of the apples. On average, a medium-sized apple weighs about 0.33 pounds, so you can expect to have around 3 medium apples in 1 pound. For smaller apples, you might fit about 4 to 5, while larger apples could mean only 2 per pound.
The number of apples in a 5.5 lb bag can vary based on the size and type of the apples. On average, a medium apple weighs about 0.33 lb, so a 5.5 lb bag would typically contain around 16 to 17 medium apples. However, this can differ if the apples are larger or smaller.
6 kg for 2.40 is 28.6% more applesauce for your money than 6 lb for 1.40 .
453 grams in 1 lb
1 lb = 16 oz
Let the apples be 'A' pence per lb Bananas cost: (A-30) pence per lb Cherries cost: (A+72) pence per lb Cost of 2 lb of apples = 2A Cost of 3 lb of bananas = 3(A-30) Cost of 2 lb of cherries = 2(A+72) But: 2A+3(A-30) = 2(A+72) So: 2A+3A-90 = 2A+144 => 3A = 234 => A = 78 Therefore cherries cost: 78+72 = 150 pence per lb
1 lb. = about 4 small apples 1 lb. = about 3 medium apples 1 lb. = about 2 large apples
it cost 25 cents in 1995.
It would be 220 calories about, and 1 lb.
Depends how big they are! A single large Mutsu apple can weigh over one pound.
1
Apples: x pence per lb Pears: x-5 pence perlb But: 5x+3(x-5) = 465p So: 5x+3x-15 = 465 => 8x = 480 and x = 60 Therefore: lb of pears cost 55p and a lb of apples cost 60p
1 lb = 1 lb.
16 of each
352 lb equals 352 lb.
8 apples
6.02 * 10^23 or 602,300,000,000,000,000,000,000 apples.
None. You never said 20lb sack actually had any apples in it. :)