How much does a "stone" weigh?

I’ve seen “stone” mentioned as a unit of weight recently. Just wondering what the converts to in pounds.

Thanks

1 stone is equal to 14 pounds.

14 pounds

Key Indicators Of Mold Problems - Keep Senses Open A handy conversion tool, lots of different measurements

Thanks for the quick answers!

google is really good for this. Searching for things like 1 stone in pounds. Gets you the google calculator which does all sorts of conversions.

It might be mentioned, however, that it is normally used only for giving the weights of people. One would not refer to a “stone of flour,” for example.

They used to.
From here

and

Jane Austen Historic Recipes

Bolding mine

Hey, there are probably some elderly people here who do still refer to, for instance, a stone of potatoes, well, assuming the said elderly people feels strong enough to carry that weight, I suppose.

Although most weights have been metric in the U.K. for some time now, there are still plenty of people who think in terms of pounds etc, so stones is appropriate for things that tend to be heavy. I’m sure my mother, for example thinks in terms of pints of milks, pounds of sugar etc, even if what she actually buys in is litres or kilogrammes.

Oh, not me, me is far too young. Believe that if you like. :smiley:
We do mostly still tend to use “stones” for people’s weights, though - sounds SO much more petite than when you do it in pounds. :slight_smile:

That’s because we still live in The Stone Age.

Horse racing, a sport which has never embraced the metric system with any degree of enthusiasm, still uses the stone as a unit of weight. The runners listed in the morning line are described as carrying 11-7 (11 stones & 7 pounds) rather than 161 lb or the metric equivalent. This ties up with peoples’ weights since most of this handicap consists of the jockey, the rest being made up with lead.

Oddly perhaps, if Horse A is considered 14 lb better than Horse B it is said to have a stone in hand. However, if Horse A is considered 16 lb superior to Horse B it is said to have 16 lb in hand rather than 1 st 2 lb. Thus the parlance can change according to context.

While typing this post I have been listening to Exile on Main Street by The Rolling Units of Fourteen Pounds.

As mentioned, potatoes are often sold in half stone, or stone bags in the UK and Ireland. I think Tesco’s may have plastic kilo bags for them now though.

Side note: the plural of stone (weight) is “stone”. At least venaculararilarily.

OTOH, as evidenced by the follow up post you submitted, sometimes it’s just easier to ask it here. That way I avoid determining which of thousands of results to start clicking, and just get a straightforward answer of “stone=14 pounds”.

Google has its place. But every now and again an OP takes fewer keystrokes to get the answer. Plus people get to look smart by just answering a question.

And really, wouldn’t you rather get credit for answering a question than Goolge? I tend to trust more what I read here in GQ than the results of keywords entered on a search engine. :wink:

That much I knew. (Yay me for whatever it’s worth.)

Now, in order to have full knowledge in being a pain in the ass when filling out a form asking for height/weight, what would an equally obscure measure of height be?

Stone = 14 pounds. (English pound? What is the official name of the measurement?)

So I weigh 17.1 stone. (Stone?)

Standing at 6’ 4" what measurement can I use?

Again, it’s unlikely I’ll actually use these measurements, but if I want to have a bit of fun with a government form or application, I’d like to have some flair in submitting something that will be dismissed.

Tesco sells bagged potatoes in multiples of 2.5KG - pretty much everything has to be labelled and sold in metric in the UK now, but you can sometimes find examples where it’s labelled and sold in metric, but clearly an imperial measure under the bonnet - for example, you might find potatoes in a farm shop in 6.3 kilo bags (6.3 kg is approximately half a stone)

TFTFY.

It’s “pound” here too - in “Imperial” (which is what you call “English”). Same as you.

It depends - by the 0.1, do you mean 1 pound, or 1.4 pounds? If the former, which is how it’s normally expressed, you’d say “17 stone 1 pound”. For personal weight measurements, the nearest pound is the finest measure used.

193 cm. Or 1930 mm.

Oops. Thank you.

You have to be a bit careful with that, because not all of the imperial units are the same size as their US ‘English’ counterparts; the ones I know about are:
Imperial pint is approx. 1.2 US pint (Measures based on multiple pints - for example gallon, quart - are obviously subject to the same ratio)

Imperial fluid ounce (of which there are 20 in an Imperial pint) is approx 0.96 US fluid ounce (of which there are 16 in a US pint)

There might be others.

Yes, but an imperial pound is the same as an “English” pound.

Isn’t it? :self-doubts: