kilograms!
You would use the metric unit "kilograms" to measure the weight of a sack of peaches.
All depends what sack you mean - 'we always buy a sack of potatoes' or 'a couple of employees got the sack at the end of the week' or 'go to bed, lets hit the sack'
The mass of a 10 kg sack of sugar would remain 10 kg regardless of its location, including in orbit around Saturn. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object and does not change with location. However, the weight of the sack would be different due to Saturn's gravity, which is much stronger than Earth's. In orbit, the sack would experience microgravity, effectively making it feel weightless, but its mass would still be 10 kg.
A "sack" is not a standard unit of measure, sacks come in many sizes. For this reason one can not say in general how many cubic meters of gravel any sack contains.
In the game Ferbaderb, players need to insert four specific items into "the things" to win the game. These items are a red herring, a sack of potatoes, a rubber chicken, and a kazoo.
You would use the metric unit "kilograms" to measure the weight of a sack of peaches.
You must first decide WHAT you want to measure about the potatoes - their diameter, circumference, mass, volume, etc. To buy or sell potatoes, the mass (commonly called "weight") is most relevant.
A person's mass, airline [check-in] luggage, sack of potatoes, cereals.
All depends what sack you mean - 'we always buy a sack of potatoes' or 'a couple of employees got the sack at the end of the week' or 'go to bed, lets hit the sack'
That depends on the weight of the potatoes in the sack. For the carbohydrates in potatoes by weight, see the page link, further down this page, listed under Related Questions..
Usually at supermarkets or grocery stores.
None. You never said 20lb sack actually had any apples in it. :)
its many things. two of which are an empty sack of potatoes, and an organ inside a fish(aka air bladder)
The mass of a sack of breadfruit can vary depending on the size and number of breadfruits in the sack. On average, a sack of breadfruit may weigh between 20 to 50 pounds.
The collective noun is a sack of potatoes.
The mass of a 10 kg sack of sugar would remain 10 kg regardless of its location, including in orbit around Saturn. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object and does not change with location. However, the weight of the sack would be different due to Saturn's gravity, which is much stronger than Earth's. In orbit, the sack would experience microgravity, effectively making it feel weightless, but its mass would still be 10 kg.
It depends on the size of the sack. A sack is not an international standard measure.