Three units! There are nearly 50 units for measuring mass. And that is without any of the multitude of metric units: nanogram, microgram, milligram, gram, or intermediate measures.
See the Wikipedia link.
The three units for measuring mass are:
Kilograms
Grams
Milligrams
It is a measure of mass in the old Imperial system of units.
Answer:Mass is measured in kilograms or grams.
Do you mean metric or imperial? Metric is used in Europe, and with certain things in the US. Imperial is used in the US and a few other holdouts. Anyways, mass is used in the metric system, so their unit is the gram.
The question is fishing for the answer: "mass".The gram is a unit of mass, but the ounce is not.Some imperial units for mass are the pound-mass and the slug.The ounce is a unit of force, including weight.
What is two imperial unit of linear measurement
It is a measure of mass in the old Imperial system of units.
Length:Inch, foot, yard, rod, furlong, mileMass:Pound-mass, poundalWeight:Ounce, pound-force, ton
Because of their association with the Brittish Empire.
Metric and Imperial units are units of measurements based on different initial standards. They include such things as length, weight (mass), time etc. The standard units are given, all other units in the system are derived from the standard units to ensure compatibility within the system Standard units in the metric system are; (not a complete list) Length: metre Mass: kilogram time : second In the imperial system the units would be; Length: yard (since 1958) Mass: pound Time : second There are conversion tables to change one system to another. For instance you can say 30 mph is equal to 42.28 kph and both parties will know the speed if they use different standards.
The imperial unit of mass is the "slug", equal to 14.5939029 kilograms. A 1-slug mass on the Earth's surface weighs 32.17405 pounds. A 1-slug mass will accelerate at 1 foot per second per second under the force of 1 pound.
=7.8611... imperial units
Answer:Mass is measured in kilograms or grams.
The three main subatomic particles are the proton, neutron, and electron. Of these three, the electron has the least amount of mass at about 0.0005 amu or Atomic Mass units.
It is three units out of every eight. Its value will depend on what is being measured: area, length, mass, etc and the units being used.
They are both systems of measurement in which there are sets of 7 units for measuring physical attributes of objects and derived units for measuring other attributes. For example, Basic units for mass: Kilogram (metric) or Pound (Imperial) Derived units for area: Square Metre (metric) or square inch (Imperial) Derived unit for pressure: kg / sq metre = Pascal (metric) or pounds / square inch = psi (Imperial).
Yes. Miles, yards, feet and inches are Imperial units - kilometres, metres, centimetres and millimetres are Metric units.
Ten times the basic unit. Although I have not come across it in any Imperial units.