It does not, so the question is based on nonsense.
Galilieo is said to have demonstrated it by dropping different weights from the Leaning Tower of Pisa. While he most likely did prove that acceleartion due to gravity is constant, that method is now considered an urban myth.
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).
not good
It's not a question of where it grips it! It's a simple question of weight ratios! A five ounce bird could not possibly carry a one pound coconut!
Centimeters are units of distance/length, not of weight.
A Jersey five pound note is worth five pounds in Wales.
The Five Pound Man was created in 1937.
Five Bananas are in a pound
The weight load ratio of a fall arrest harness is typically around 5:1, which means it can support a load up to five times the maximum user weight. This ratio is designed to provide a safety margin in case of a fall. It is important to choose a harness that is rated for your specific weight and intended use.
Given 2 cups per pound, there would be 10 cups in a five pound package.
i have a george best five pound note what is it worth
This question is hard to interpret, but here are some possible answers: Since 16 ounces is equal to one pound, five pounds is 5 times as much as one pound. If the "16 ounce object" is a container, it could conceivably hold five pounds of some other substance such as water, for example. In that case the two taken together would weight 6 pounds, or six times as much as one pound. In an outright trick question, the sixteen ounce object could contain five British one Pound notes or coins and weigh only slightly more than one pound. By definition, a sixteen ounce object itself cannot weigh five pounds.
There has been a British Five Pound coin on and off since 1817. The British decimal Five Pound gold bullion coin was first issued in 1980 and the Five Pound "Crown" coin was first issued in 1990. The current British Five Pound "Crown" coin is intended to be a non-circulating legal tender commemorative coin. The Royal Mint has no current plans to produce a general circulation Five Pound coin in the foreseeable future.