In normal conditions (in Earth's atmosphere, at the same elevation) a ton of apples weighs more than a ton of feathers, because the density of an apple is greater than density of a feather (feathers are mostly hollow inside). Therefore, the Earth's atmosphere has a greater "floating" effect on the feathers, making them weigh less than apples. People who give "both weigh the same" answer ignore the fact that a ton (1000 kg) is the measure of mass, not weight. Let me ask: what weighs more, a ton of rocks or a ton of helium-filled balloons? Guess! ;) Consider also that if you weigh the two commodities in a vacuum then there is no buoyancy factor.
There are 32,000 ounces in a ton.
There are 2,000 pounds in a ton.
The conversion of tons to milliliters depends on the substance being measured. As an example, for water, 1 ton is equal to 1,000,000 milliliters. Therefore, 150,000 tons would be equivalent to 150,000,000,000 milliliters.
There are 1 million milliliters in a metric ton (1 ton = 1,000,000 mL).
250 apples
In 2005 apples were roughly $1.80 per pound. Apples had went up considerable in price. Considering there was a time you could purchase a ton of apples for a little more than that price.
potatoes, blueberries, strawberries, apples, and a ton of other harty plants
2 apples.
5 apples
two apples
That would depend on the size of the crate, and the size of the apples.
you have 2 apples
2 because that's how many you took.
You have 3 apples! You have 3 apples!
2 apples because if WE TAKE 2 apples then WE HAVE 3 apples.
48 apples