It is either a unit of weight = 16 ounces; 0.454 kg or a unit of money in Britain. (Or an area which was enclosed in a village and where strayed cattle were kept until their owner claimed them).
lb originates from the Latin word Libra, meaning pound.
The English pound sign (£) originated from the letter L with a line through it, which stood for the Latin word "libra," meaning pound. It has evolved over time into the symbol we recognize today to represent the British currency.
The abbreviation lb comes from the Latin word libra, meaning scales or balances which also described a Roman unit similar to the pound.
The word "pound" comes from the Latin word "pondo," meaning "weight." The symbol for the pound unit, lb, comes from the abbreviation "lb" for the Latin word "libra," which also means "weight" or "balance."
The term "pound" as a unit of weight originated from the Latin word "libra," which means scales or balance. It was used in ancient Rome as a unit of measurement for goods and gradually evolved into the pound as we know it today.
It comes from the Latin word 'libra' - meaning 'scales'.
The word inch, meaning one twelfth of a foot, derives from the Latin word "uncia", meaning an eleventh part. Incidentally, this is the same derivation as the word "ounce", which represents one sixteenth of a pound.
Lb is an abbreviation for the Latin word, libra, which means balance and scales, but also stands for libra pondo, meaning pound by weight
of Pound, of Pound
The word inch comes from the Latin word "uncia" meaning one twelfth part. The word ounce, which is used to mean one sixteenth of a pound, is derived from the same word.
Lb is an abbreviation of the Latin word for pound. The original Latin word for the pound weight was libra pondo.The Latin word libra means 'balances, scales' (as in the astrological sign for the constellation Libra, which can be described as looking like a set of balance scales). The word pondus, meaning weight, is the original Latin for the English word 'pound.' So libra pondo meant 'a balance scale weight (of a Roman pound)'. A Roman pound weighed about 327 grams. [The British pound became standardised at about 1/3rd heavier than the ancient Roman pound]In time libra pondo became shortened to just libra, i.e. a quick way of saying 'libra pondo.' Then libra was abbreviated to lb, still meaning pound or pounds. Lbs is the logical English plural of lb, but either lb or lbs can be used.
Apparently our word "pound" comes from the Latin word "pondo" which means weight.