That all depends on where you've taken the poor thing.
On Earth, one poundmass weighs one poundforce, so [s]he weighs 29 pounds here.
The weight of that same mass is different in other places.
First, see the LINK below to learn what a foot-pound is, then read as follows: So as you can see, you cannot convert pounds to foot pounds. The magnitude of a torque is equal to the magnitude of the applied force multiplied by the distance between the object's axis of rotation and the point where the force is applied. That means that one foot-pound of torque is a force of one pound applied one foot from the object's axis of rotation. So if the weight were one foot from the axis, you could say that one foot-pound is equal to one pound. But... Only if the weight was perpendicular to the line from the axis to where the weight was located. Torque is a "turning" force and weight is a "linear" force. Hope that was helpful.
divide the price by the weight in pounds. > eg: 4.5 pounds of meat costs £12.75, the cost per pound weight = 12.75 / 4.5 = £2.83 per pound weight
By pound do you mean weight or the british pound and what are we comparing it to,
lbs is a british pound
"Pound" is a unit of force. "Kg" is a unit of mass. They don't convert directly. On Earth, 70 pounds is the weight of 31.751 kg of mass. (rounded) On the moon, 70 pounds is the weight of 191.858 kg of mass. (rounded) In other places, 70 pounds is the weight of different amounts of mass.
The child's weight would be approx 1034 pounds-force.
The weight of 2 pounds of water is just that--2 pounds. Pound is a unit of weight (or, more formally, force).
a pound is a measurement of weight and is about the weight of an average childrens thesaurus. * * * * * No, a pound is a measure of mass, not of weight. A body with a mass of 1 pound will have different weights on the surface of the moon, the earth and a neutron star, for example.
Your weight will be approx 71500 pound-force.
First, see the LINK below to learn what a foot-pound is, then read as follows: So as you can see, you cannot convert pounds to foot pounds. The magnitude of a torque is equal to the magnitude of the applied force multiplied by the distance between the object's axis of rotation and the point where the force is applied. That means that one foot-pound of torque is a force of one pound applied one foot from the object's axis of rotation. So if the weight were one foot from the axis, you could say that one foot-pound is equal to one pound. But... Only if the weight was perpendicular to the line from the axis to where the weight was located. Torque is a "turning" force and weight is a "linear" force. Hope that was helpful.
(weight) force = newtons, 1 kilogram force = 9.80665 newtons
There is some possible confusion here. A pound is an older unit; from a time when the distinction between mass and weight was not very clear. Therefore, the pound is sometimes used as a unit of mass, sometimes as the equivalent unit of force (assuming standard gravity). So, in my opinion, "how many pounds in a Newton" is correct - if it is understood that you are using pound as a weight. In the unit foot-pound, pound is definitely used as a force.
Instead of adding a 25 pound weight, and then 2 ten pound weights, it would be much easier to add a 45 pound weight. A 45 pound weight is standard in every gym, and not everyone can lift 10 more pounds if there was a fifty pound weight (five extra pounds on each side totals to 10 more pounds to lift).
Any child weighing 130 lbs. will be dead soon, if not already. It will weight the same either way.
divide the price by the weight in pounds. > eg: 4.5 pounds of meat costs £12.75, the cost per pound weight = 12.75 / 4.5 = £2.83 per pound weight
There are 14 pounds in 1 stone. Therefore:14 x 5 = 70 pounds. The pound weight of 5 stone is 70 pounds
1 pound 1 pound 1 pound lol, you did mean weight wise right?