Pound (mass)
A pound (usually abbreviated as lb, plural lbs) is a unit used to measure the mass of something. It is used in the imperial system and the United States customary system. It is related to the Pound (force). There are a number of different definitions. The most commonly used definition today is the international avoirdupois pound. This is equal to 0.45359237 kilograms, and is divided into 16 avoirdupois ounces.[1]
The abbreviation lb is for the Latin word libra, meaning weight.
Avoirdupois pound
The avoirdupois pound (abbreviation lb., plural lbs.) is the most common unit. This type is used for all purposes except the uses of the troy pound. Most people from the United States, United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Liberia and Burma use this as their standard measure of their personal mass.
Units | Grains | Drachms | Ounces | Pounds | Stones | Quarters | Short Hundredweights (Centals) | Long Hundredweights | Short Tons | Long Tons | Metric Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Avoirdupois pound | 7,000 | 256 | 16 | 1 | 1⁄14 | 1⁄28 | 1⁄100 | 1⁄112 | 1⁄2,000 | 1⁄2,240 | 453.59237 Grammes |
Troy pound
The troy pound (abbreviation t lb., plural t lbs.) is generally not used anymore. It was used in England by apothecaries and jewellers. A troy pound contains 12 troy ounces. The troy ounce is still used to measure the mass of precious metals and gems.
Units | Grains | Pennyweights | Ounces | Pounds | Metric Values |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Troy Pound | 5,760 | 240 | 12 | 1 | 373.2417216 Grammes |
Metric pound
In some European countries, a metric pound is an informal term for half a kilogram (500 grams). In the Netherlands, however, the metric pound (Dutch: pond) is equal to 480 grams. A Dutch 'ons' is equal to 100 grams, and it is often said that 5 ons is 1 pond.
Comparison
Units | Avoirdupois pounds | Troy pounds | Metric value |
---|---|---|---|
Avoirdupois pound | 1 | 1155⁄875 | 453.59237 Grammes |
Troy pound | 720⁄875 | 1 | 373.2417216 Grammes |
Pound (mass) Media
The tower pound displayed as the weight of a pound sterling of 240 early silver pennies (original pennyweight)
References
- ↑ United States National Bureau of Standards (1959-06-25). "Notices "Refinement of values for the yard and the pound"" (PDF). Retrieved 2006-08-12.