Extrapolating from the answer to how may grains in a pound of rice, 29,000, (elsewhere in Answers.com) we get something like 64,000 grains in a kilogram (@ 2.2 lbs / kg). This could vary based on the kind of rice.
There are about 49 grains of rice in a gram.
According to freerice.com, if rice is a staple part of your diet, then you need 18,400 grains of rice.
14,500 grains freerice.com
The mass of one grain of rice is 25 milligram or .025 grams. There are about 29,000 rice grains in approximately one pound of long-grain white rice.
I assume we're discussing medium grain white rice in this scenario, wherein each grain weighs approximately 0.03 grams. Based on this assumption, a single kilogram of rice might include around 33,000 grains. Hence, scaling that up to 10 kilograms
There are about 49 grains of rice in a gram.
According to freerice.com, if rice is a staple part of your diet, then you need 18,400 grains of rice.
Different styles of rice weigh slightly different amounts. We measured white long grain rice, and 1 gram of this rice was approximately 49 grains.
14,500 grains freerice.com
Answer: Approximately 7,200 grains of rice are in a cup.Explanation: A grain of rice weighs between 20 and 30 mg. A cup of rice weighs about 7 oz or about 217724mg.
The mass of one grain of rice is 25 milligram or .025 grams. There are about 29,000 rice grains in approximately one pound of long-grain white rice.
50 grains.
A single grain of rice weights approximately .028 grams. 2000 grains of rice weighs 56 grams. Since one pound is equal to 453.6 grams, 2000 grains of rice is equal to .12 pounds.
There are approximately 70,000 grains of salt in one kilogram.
1000 grains of rice equals 23 g of rice. So 4330 would be about equal to one serving which is 3.5 oz. So 618 grains are in 0.5 oz. So in a 12 oz bottle it would have about 14832 grains of rice. Remember, this is an estimate.
Grains of rice weigh from 20 to 40 milligrams, average 30. Therefore (1 kg = 1,000 g) ÷ (30 mg = 0.030 g) = 33,000 grains.
approximately 15,000 grains of rice are there in one cup of rice > > > > >The '~15K' answer, above, reminds me strongly of a quote I use frequently; '71.3% of the people who quote statistics make them up on the spot' I believe my original comment on this question at the time of its first posting is still valid; long grain? short grain? converted? arborio? IMHO, in a question like this, either context or the 'why' of the question is critical