A unit, for measuring mass (or in imprecise language) weight.
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∙ 13y agoA gram is a unit of mass in the metric system. It is used to measure the weight or mass of an object.
There are 427 grams in 427 meters per gram. This is because the unit "per gram" indicates that the quantity of 427 meters is in relation to 1 gram.
In the CGS system, the unit of mole is the "mole" itself. The quantity of substance is still represented by Avogadro's number, which is approximately (6.022 \times 10^{23}) entities.
Gram is the basic unit of mass in the metric system. It is commonly used to measure the weight of objects and substances.
The gram is a unit of mass in the metric system.
energy/mass example: calories/gram
gram or kilogram
the gram is a unit of mass.
"0.01 gram" is a quantity of mass.It's the same quantity as 0.00001 kilogram.
~0.035 oz Here's an easy trick for conversions - just type what you want into Google in this format, "(quantity) (original unit) in (desired unit)", and it will do the calculation for you. For example, I typed in "1 gram in ounces" to get the answer to this question.
The gram is an SI unit. However, the SI base unit is the kilogram, not the gram.
A gram of a molecular substance is the quantity that will have a mass of 1 gram.
A quantity is a numerical value that represents the amount or measurement of something, while a unit is a standardized amount used to measure that quantity. Quantity is the actual numerical value, while unit is the specific measurement scale used to quantify the quantity.
no its not. gram = unit of mass. milliliter= unit of volume. entirely different measures
A standard use for a measurement of a physical quantity is called the unit of that physical quantity
No, gram is a unit of mass; the unit of force is newton.
Gram IS the unit in this case. Gram is a unit for measuring mass. The international unit for mass is the kilogram; thus, one gram is 1/1000 of a kilogram.
Gram is the basic unit of mass in the metric system. It is commonly used to measure the weight of objects and substances.