They weigh the same. Both equal to two pounds.
A building made of bricks.
Bricks have more density whereas feathers have less comparatively. Space occupied ie volume = mass/ density. So space occupied is inversely related to the density. Hence feathers occupy more space than the bricks.
a pound is a pound is a pound!!!a pound of anything always weighs a pound doesn't matter if it is feathers or bricks!!!
No, they should weigh the same.
Neither, they both weigh a ton.
2 pounds is 2 pounds, whether it is bricks or feathers.
they are the same
Each has the same weight . . . one pound.
Trick question? The 60 kilograms (a little more than 132 pounds) of feathers weigh more!
They weigh the same, their densities are different.
-- The bricks and the feathers have the same weight.-- The bricks and the feathers have the same mass.-- The feathers have more volume than the bricks.-- The bricks have more density than the feathers.-- Neither the package of bricks nor the package of feathers is edible.-- The bricks definitely sink in water, whereas the feathers may float on water.-- When dropped through air, the feathers fall slower than the bricks, because of air resistance.-- I'm guessing that the feathers cost more than the bricks.
1,000 pounds of bricks and 1,000 pounds of feathers both weigh 1,000 pounds. In other words, their weights are identical. Neither of them weighs more or less than the other does. They weigh the same, meaning that there is no difference. The two loads would precisely balance on a symmetrical see-saw. Mathematically, the sum of their weights is twice the weight of either one, each is equivalent to 100% of the other, and the difference between their weights is zero. Expressed as a ratio, the weight of the bricks divided by the weight of the feathers is equal to the unity fraction (1/1 = 1), and its reciprocal is the selfsame number. As an exponential operation, the square of either one singly is equal to the product of their individual weights. If a passerby asked you for the weight of the feathers and you cleverly quoted the weight of the bricks instead, the fellow could not detect your trick. The two are in all ways truly indistinguishable, and you may freely substitute one for the other for any purpose or application.
They both weigh 1000 pounds, exactly the same. They both weigh 1000 pounds, exactly the same.
No, a pound of anything has the same mass.Well, my friend, a pound is a pound, so they are of equal weights.
1Ib of bricks.
If you give me two sealed cartons, one with 2 pounds of bricks in it and the other with 2 pounds of feathers in it, there's no way I can use a scale to tell which is which, because their weights are the same. Do you think maybe a truck doesn't need such a large engine to carry a ton of feathers as it needs to carry a ton of bricks ? 2 pounds of bricks, 2 pounds of feathers, 2 pounds of mud, corn flakes, uranium, dog fur, newspaper, pencils, gasoline, onions, cotton swabs, salt, ballpoint pens, tomatoes, cat litter, red paint, potting soil, purple yarn, wrapping paper, tea bags, junk mail, cellphones, toilet paper, helium, dollar bills, laundry soap, bus tokens, or instant coffee all weigh exactly the same.
Neither, even though you have not identified the constituent substance of the 2.5 pounds. Whatever it is, the weights you've listed are equal.