Their mass is the same.
They both weigh the same, 1 kg
It is one quarter. Numerically that means it is one of each four items, or 1/4. If you had four oranges, then one orange would be one quarter of all the oranges. Take a dozen (12) oranges and separate them into four groups with three oranges in each group. Then one of those groups of three oranges represents one fourth (one out of four groups) of 12 oranges. In this example the item was a group not an orange
The weight of a body in air is its apparent weight because the body body remains immersed in air . Therefore apparent weight of 1kg cotton and one kg iron is same .But volume of 1 kg cotton is greater than the volume of 1 iron
The price of one metric ton of organic oranges ranges from $350 to $600.
One kilogram is about 2.2 times heavier than one pound.
They weigh the same...One Pound.
Nooo, 1kg gold is heavier 1kg cotton, because the last one has much more volume than the first, so Archimedes force reduces weight of a cotton more!
they weigh the same silly
10kg as it is 8.7kg bigger than 1.3kg
They both weigh the same, 1 kg
It's a trick question... they both weigh the same
One kg is equal to 2.20462262 pounds. Multiply one kg by 10 and the total is the answer. 10kg is equal to 22.0462262 pounds.
Same. That's an old trick question but feathers were more commonly used than cotton.
10kg
Cotton is still the number one cash crop in most of the southern states. Oranges are number one in Florida. Peanuts and soy beans are important crops, as in rice in LA.
not always it is obvious that it is possible for a small orange to contain more seeds then an heavier seed because there could be only five seeds in the giant orange and eleven in the small one!! not always it is obvious that it is possible for a small orange to contain more seeds then an heavier seed because there could be only five seeds in the giant orange and eleven in the small one!!
No one. GMNO oranges currently do not exist.