Assuming that no weight is added or taken away, the weight (or the mass) will remain the same. However, this assumption is not always correct: when you freeze stuff, sometimes it accumulates moisture from the surrounding air, which then freezes.
26 lbs
A quarter of a pound.
If they both weigh a kilogram then they both weigh the same... a kilogram. It's like asking if a pound of feathers weighs more then a pound of rocks... they both weigh a pound.
It weighs one pound per pound
They are both one pound, so they weigh the same amount.
Seriously? Yeah.
A frozen turkey does not weigh more than fresh. A 15-lb frozen turkey will weigh 15 lbs. when it is thawed.
Water will stay the same weight when it is frozen, it still has the same molecules that it started with
It will still weigh one pound. The only thing that will change is its' size since it will expand by 9% and will become less dense.
26 lbs
I have seen onions that weigh a pound each, on the other hand there are smaller ones that that are 5-6 to the pound.
Meat will always weigh the same whether thawed or frozen. This is will hold true unless the water from the meat will be drained during the thawing process. It will then weigh lighter than its frozen state.
The packaging of berries varies by size. The sizes of the berries are actually measured by weight and have labels that say the weight. The weight of each pack of berries is measured in ounces which then can be translated into pounds. 16 ounces= 1 pound
They both weigh a pound. Which means the weigh the same
A pound.
they both weigh the same because a pound of sand and a pound of lead will still weigh a pound
No, they should weigh the same.