There are 14 pounds in 1 stone. Therefore, the US equivalent in weight of a British stone is 14 pounds.
192.4
192
A stone is a measure of weight. It is usually used when talking about body weight. One stone is 14 pounds. So 18 stone times 14 is 252 US pounds.
200 pounds is 16 stone (US) or 14.28 stone (UK).
Usually Kilograms. The pound weight is used in the US. The old weight term was Stone.
Pounds.
The equivalent is Two Year college degree or Associates degree.
This depends on the density of the stone and the over all volume of the stone. So one cubic yard rather than one yard. Simply determine the type of stone, look up its typical density usually in lb/ft3, and covert the volume into cubic feet, then multiply the two values to obtain its weight.
Let us say the stone is suspended in a medium by an ideal spring, which displays the "weight" of the stone in that medium. The stone reads "w" pounds in weight in air. The same stone will read less in water (w-x); the stone, being a solid, displaces an amount of water equal to the volume of the stone, and the stone will weigh less by the weight of the water (x). So in this case, the two weights have to be different, no matter how small the stone is, unless the stone has the same density as water or the stone is hollow with no crust thicknesses and a tiny hole to let water in -- all purely hypothetical.
The US equivalent to a British Commonwealth (UK, Aus, India, etc.) Flight Lieutenant is Captain (US Army/Air Force/Marines) or Lieutenant (US Navy).
Gallons to quarts:1 US gallon = 4 US quarts 1 US quart = 0.25 US gallonsGallons to liters:1 US gallon is equivalent to 3.785 L. 1 Imperial British gallon is equivalent to 4.546 L.Quarts to liters:1 US quart is equivalent to 0.946 L. 1 Imperial British quart is 1.1365 L.4.
The British Farthing, whether it was made from bronze or copper, was one quarter of a Penny. I do not believe that there was a US equivalent.
Mommy is the correct spelling in US English. The British English equivalent is mummy.
Yes: Most of us still say our weight in stones.... but the metric alternative is becoming more common.