| Gram | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unit sign | g | |||
| Measure | Mass | |||
| Base Unit | Kilogram | |||
| Multiple of Base | 10-3 | |||
| System | SI, CGS, other | |||
| Common usage | Commonly used in cooking and food labeling | |||
| Examples | ||||
| One millilitre of water is 1 g at 4 °C. Typical coins: a euro is 7.5 g and a US penny is 2.5 g |
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| Conversion | ||||
| SI | 10 dg= 1 g = 0.1 dag = 0.001 kg | |||
| Imperial | 1 g ≈ 0.0353 ounce ≈ 0.00220 pound | |||
| see also: Orders of magnitude (mass) | ||||
| Next units | ||||
| decigram | < | Gram | < | decagram |
The gram (sometimes gramme in British English, although gram prevails), (Greek/Latin root grámma); symbol g, is a unit of mass.
Originally defined as "the absolute weight of a volume of pure water equal to the cube of the hundredth part of a metre, and at the temperature of melting ice"[1] (later 4 °C), a gram is now defined as one one-thousandth of the SI base unit, the kilogram, or 1×10-3 kg, which itself is defined as being equal to the mass of a physical prototype preserved by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures.
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The International System of Units abbreviation for the gram is g, and follows the numeric value with a space, as in "200 g"[2][3]. In some fields and regions, the international standard symbols for units are used quite strictly, in particular in technical and scientific publications and in legally regulated product labels. In other contexts (e.g., grocery market traders), a wide range of other abbreviations can also be encountered, such as gr, gm, grm, gms, grms.
It was the base unit of mass in the original French metric system and the later centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system of units. The word originates from late Latin gramma – a small weight.
The gram is today the most widely used unit of measurement for non-liquid ingredients in cooking and grocery shopping worldwide. For food products that are typically sold in quantities far less than 1 kg, the unit price is normally given per 100 g.
Most standards and legal requirements for nutrition labels on food products require relative contents to be stated per 100 g of the product, such that the resulting figure can also be read as a percentage.
Because SI prefixes may not be concatenated (serially linked) within the name or symbol for a unit of measure, SI prefixes are used with the gram, not the kilogram, which already has a prefix as part of its name.[4] For instance, one-millionth of a kilogram is 1 mg (one milligram), not 1 µkg (one microkilogram).
| Submultiples | Multiples | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value | Symbol | Name | Value | Symbol | Name | |
| 10–1 g | dg | decigram | 101 g | dag | decagram | |
| 10–2 g | cg | centigram | 102 g | hg | hectogram | |
| 10–3 g | mg | milligram | 103 g | kg | kilogram | |
| 10–6 g | µg | microgram (mcg) | 106 g | Mg | megagram (tonne) | |
| 10–9 g | ng | nanogram | 109 g | Gg | gigagram | |
| 10–12 g | pg | picogram | 1012 g | Tg | teragram | |
| 10–15 g | fg | femtogram | 1015 g | Pg | petagram | |
| 10–18 g | ag | attogram | 1018 g | Eg | exagram | |
| 10–21 g | zg | zeptogram | 1021 g | Zg | zettagram | |
| 10–24 g | yg | yoctogram | 1024 g | Yg | yottagram | |
| Common prefixes are in bold face.[5] | ||||||