net weight - definizione. Che cos'è net weight
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Cosa (chi) è net weight - definizione

FORCE ACTING ON A MASS DUE TO GRAVITY
Gross weight; Measure of weight; Weigh; Net weight; Nett weight; Weighty; Weighing; Ponderous; Gross rail load; Laden weight; Units of weight; Wieght; Heaviness
  • Ancient Greek]] official bronze weights dating from around the 6th century BC, exhibited in the [[Ancient Agora Museum]] in Athens, housed in the [[Stoa of Attalus]].
  • 0}} in 0.86 seconds. This is a horizontal acceleration of 5.3{{spaces}}g. Combined with the vertical g-force in the stationary case the [[Pythagorean theorem]] yields a g-force of 5.4{{spaces}}g. It is this g-force that causes the driver's weight if one uses the operational definition. If one uses the gravitational definition, the driver's weight is unchanged by the motion of the car.
  • A [[weighbridge]], used for weighing trucks
  • work=Baburnama}}</ref>
  • moments]] acting on it sum to zero).

net weight         
Weight of the goods only which does not include their packing.
weigh         
v.
1) to weigh heavily
2) (d; intr.) ('to count') to weigh against (his testimony will weigh heavily against you)
3) (d; tr.) ('to balance') to weigh against (to weigh one argument against another)
4) (d; intr.) ('to press') to weigh on (legal problems weighed heavily on her mind)
5) (P; intr.) ('to have a weight') the suitcase weighs quite a lot
weight         
I
n.
amount weighed, heaviness
1) to gain, put on weight
2) to lose, take off weight
3) dead; gross; minimum; net weight
4) atomic; avoirdupois; birth; molecular weight
5) under a weight (the table collapsed under the weight of the food)
device used for its heaviness in athletic exercises
6) to lift weights
7) heavy; light weights
8) a set of weights
importance
9) to carry weight
10) to add; attach, give, lend weight to
11) considerable weight
12) (misc.) to throw one's weight around/about (BE) ('to flaunt one's influence'); to pull one's weight ('to do one's fair share')
II
v. (D; tr.) ('to slant') to weight against (the evidence was weighted against me)

Wikipedia

Weight

In science and engineering, the weight of an object is the force acting on the object due to acceleration or gravity.

Some standard textbooks define weight as a vector quantity, the gravitational force acting on the object. Others define weight as a scalar quantity, the magnitude of the gravitational force. Yet others define it as the magnitude of the reaction force exerted on a body by mechanisms that counteract the effects of gravity: the weight is the quantity that is measured by, for example, a spring scale. Thus, in a state of free fall, the weight would be zero. In this sense of weight, terrestrial objects can be weightless: ignoring air resistance, the famous apple falling from the tree, on its way to meet the ground near Isaac Newton, would be weightless.

The unit of measurement for weight is that of force, which in the International System of Units (SI) is the newton. For example, an object with a mass of one kilogram has a weight of about 9.8 newtons on the surface of the Earth, and about one-sixth as much on the Moon. Although weight and mass are scientifically distinct quantities, the terms are often confused with each other in everyday use (e.g. comparing and converting force weight in pounds to mass in kilograms and vice versa).

Further complications in elucidating the various concepts of weight have to do with the theory of relativity according to which gravity is modeled as a consequence of the curvature of spacetime. In the teaching community, a considerable debate has existed for over half a century on how to define weight for their students. The current situation is that a multiple set of concepts co-exist and find use in their various contexts.

Esempi dal corpus di testo per net weight
1. The price per unit must be based on net weight, without packaging.
2. There is no legal requirement to mark products with a drained net weight in the UK, the report says.
3. Gordeyev also said Friday that the grain harvest in 2007 would be 76 million tons net weight, of which 10 million would be exported.
4. Nurses have better things to do with their time other than filling in forms who gave what, when and the net weight content of chocolate.
5. Andrew Tilley, principal trading standards officer at Wiltshire County Council who wrote the Drained Net Weight report, said: "It is clear that the packers haven‘t got their systems under control.