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Table of units of mass Unit Niú Metric US & Imperial Notes Taiwanese Hokkien Hakka Mandarin Character Legal Decimal Exact Approx. Lî: Lî: Lí: 釐: 1 ⁄ 1000 3 / 80,000 kg: 37.5 mg 3750 / 45,359,237 lb: 0.5787 gr: Cash; Same as Japanese Rin: Hun: Fûn: Fēn: 分: 1 ⁄ 100 3 / 8000 kg: 375 mg 37,500 / 45,359,237 ...
5 g 0.1764 oz mace or Chinese dram: liǎng: 市兩: 1 ⁄ 10: 50 g 1.764 oz tael or Chinese ounce: jīn: 市斤: 1 500 g 1.102 lb catty or Chinese pound formerly 16 liang = 1 jin dàn: 市擔: 100 50 kg 110.2 lb picul or Chinese hundredweight
However, a sheet of common copy paper that has a basis weight of 20 pounds (9.1 kg) does not have the same mass as the same size sheet of coarse paper (newsprint). In the former case, the standard ream is 500 sheets of 17-by-22-inch (432 by 559 mm) paper, and in the latter, 500 sheets of 24-by-36-inch (610 by 914 mm) paper.
The nén is also given in one source as 375 grams (13.2 oz), [25] but this value conflicts with the lạng from the same source at 37.8 grams (1.33 oz). The 375-gram value is consistent with the system of units for measuring precious metals. The đồng is also called đồng cân, to distinguish it from monetary uses. [25]
The fabric weight is measured in grams. In the metric system, the mass per unit area of all types of textiles is expressed in grams per square metre (g/m 2). The gram (alternative spelling: gramme; SI unit symbol: g) is a metric system unit of mass. A gram is defined as one thousandth of the SI base unit, the kilogram, or 1 × 10 −3 kg.
The tex (tex) is a unit of linear mass density equal to one gram per kilometre (1 g/km). [ 12 ] The number metric (Nm) is equal to 1000 metres per kilogram (1 km/kg).
2.04117 g 31.5 grain 2 မတ်သား: mattha: 4.08233 g 63 grain 2 ငါးမူးသား: nga mutha [N 1] 8.16466 g 0.288 oz: 2 ကျပ်သား: kyattha [N 2] 16.3293 g 0.576 oz 2 အဝက်သား: awettha: 204.117 g 7.2 oz 12.5 အစိတ်သား: aseittha: 408.233 g 14.4 oz 2 ငါးဆယ်သား: ngase tha ...
A number of different units of measurement were used in Sri Lanka to measure quantities like length, mass and capacity from very ancient times. [1] Under the British Empire, imperial units became the official units of measurement [2] and remained so until Sri Lanka adopted the metric system in the 1970s.