Pounds or kilograms.
Milli is not a unit of measurement on its own, but is a prefix meaning one thousandth. Milli can precede any metric unit of measurement. (i.e. metre -> millimetre litre -> millilitre)
if you want a short answer, an angle with a measure between 180 degrees and 90 degrees
Yes, on its own, the 7 has the digital value of the unit column.(The British unit column is called the ones column in America, I believe.)
We get the Unit Vector
if seesaw is balanced under its own weight with no added mass on it you cannot balance on one side. If it is unbalanced under its own weight u can add mass to balance on one side with mass depending on distance to pivot
You cannot measure mass by litres by your own methods but by physical methods it is possible.......
Kilograms (kg) are appropriate if you measure weight using the metric system. If using the English system of measurement, pounds (lbs) is acceptable. * * * * * No. A kilogram is a measure of mass, not of weight. The correct unit for measuring the weight of a person is a Newton. On the surface of the earth, a mass of 1 kg has a weight of approx 9.8 Newtons. Your weight would reduce to zero Newtons in outer space but your mass would remain unchanged. That's true but common use is "weight" to mean "mass", and you won't change that in a hurry. What matters is using the correct units when genuinely necessary. It's only recently, with the advent of the SI version of the metric system, that the distinction has raised its pedantic head; and then only in technical work, not common use including most trade. The English system in its own country uses Stones and Pounds to weigh a person, not just lb.; and bathroom scales are calibrated in these, with a concentric kg equivalent. 1 Stone = 14lb. 1kg = 2.2lb (approx)
kg! Maybe if you paid more attention to your work you would be able to find it on your own, instead of searching like a dumb a**
the same tool to measure your own massa scale
Milliliter is a measure of volume. Milligram is a measure of mass. 25 mL doesn't have a weight on its own - it depends on what you have 25 mL of.
Peoples feet come in various sizes (just look in a shoe shop) and thus if we each measured foot lengths using our own feet we would all come up with different absolute lengths and nothing we wanted to do co-operatively would ever fit together.
kilo
There is not really any requirement in length for you to measure in meters. You have to use your own judgement to choose the right unit of measurement.
0.33 Tw = 0.33 carats total weight. From that I would infer that you item whatever it might be will probably have more than one stone in it and these may be a series of smaller stones with there total mass being 0.33 carats or one third of a carat. Carat is a measure of mass with one carat = 1/5gram 200 milligrams This is a measure of any mass of any stones with each stone having its own specific mass.
Milli is not a unit of measurement on its own, but is a prefix meaning one thousandth. Milli can precede any metric unit of measurement. (i.e. metre -> millimetre litre -> millilitre)
Too vague a question. If you mean, does sealing the cup change the mass, then no it does not change the mass of the water, though the sealing material would add its own mass to the total.
It depends, If you measure your own energy it would be in joules, if it is for your house you measure it with kilo-watt hour