Перевод weight с английского на русский
- весить (взвесить)
- утяжелять (утяжелить)
3 формы глагола с транскрипцией
Base Form Инфинитив |
Past Simple 2-ая форма |
Past Participle 3-ая форма (Причастие прошедшего времени) |
Gerund Герундий |
---|---|---|---|
weight | weighted | weighted | weighting |
[weɪt] | [ˈweɪtɪd] | [ˈweɪtɪd] | [ˈweɪtɪŋ] |
[weɪt] | [ˈweɪtɪd] | [ˈweɪtɪd] | [ˈweɪtɪŋ] |
Тренажёр спряжения для запоминая форм
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Спряжение weight в английском языке во всех временах, лицах и числах
Simple Tense — Простое (неопределенное) время
Present Simple
Простое настоящее
- I weight
- you weight
- he, she weights
- we weight
- you weight
- they weight
Past Simple
Простое прошедшее
- I weighted
- you weighted
- he, she weighted
- we weighted
- you weighted
- they weighted
Future Simple
Простое будущее
- I will weight
- you will weight
- he, she will weight
- we will weight
- you will weight
- they will weight
Continuous Tense — Длительное время
Present Simple Continuous
Настоящее длительное
- I am weighting
- you are weighting
- he, she is weighting
- we are weighting
- you are weighting
- they are weighting
Past Simple Continuous
Прошедшее длительное
- I was weighting
- you were weighting
- he, she was weighting
- we were weighting
- you were weighting
- they were weighting
Future Simple Continuous
Будущее длительное
- I will be weighting
- you will be weighting
- he, she will be weighting
- we will be weighting
- you will be weighting
- they will be weighting
Perfect Tense — Совершенное время
Present Perfect
Настоящее совершенное
- I have weighted
- you have weighted
- he, she has weighted
- we have weighted
- you have weighted
- they have weighted
Past Perfect
Прошедшее совершенное
- I had weighted
- you had weighted
- he, she had weighted
- we had weighted
- you had weighted
- they had weighted
Future Perfect
Будущее совершенное
- I will have weighted
- you will have weighted
- he, she will have weighted
- we will have weighted
- you will have weighted
- they will have weighted
Perfect Continuous Tense — Длительное совершенное время
Present Perfect Continuous
Настоящее совершенное длительное
- I have been weighting
- you have been weighting
- he, she has been weighting
- we have been weighting
- you have been weighting
- they have been weighting
Past Perfect Continuous
Прошедшее совершенное длительное
- I had been weighting
- you had been weighting
- he, she had been weighting
- we had been weighting
- you had been weighting
- they had been weighting
Future Perfect Continuous
Будущее совершенное длительное
- I will have been weighting
- you will have been weighting
- he, she will have been weighting
- we will have been weighting
- you will have been weighting
- they will have been weighting
Conditional — Условное наклонение
Present
- I would weight
- you would weight
- he, she would weight
- we would weight
- you would weight
- they would weight
Perfect
- I would have weighted
- you would have weighted
- he, she would have weighted
- we would have weighted
- you would have weighted
- they would have weighted
Present Continuous
- I would be weighting
- you would be weighting
- he, she would be weighting
- we would be weighting
- you would be weighting
- they would be weighting
Perfect Continuous
- I would have been weighting
- you would have been weighting
- he, she would have been weighting
- we would have been weighting
- you would have been weighting
- they would have been weighting
Imperative — Повелительное наклонение
Imperative
- you weight
- we Let’s weight
- you weight
Проспрягать другие глаголы
seed, constrain, suspend, refer, equal, confine, slip, canvass, pass, mold, up, nod
вес, масса, груз, тяжесть, значение, нагрузка, весить, нагружать, увеличивать вес
существительное ↓
- вес
specific weight — удельный вес
my weight is 140 pounds — мой вес /я вешу/ 140 фунтов
unit of weight — единица веса
to put on weight — прибавлять в весе, полнеть
to lose weight — терять в весе, худеть
to sell by weight — продавать на вес
sole weight — спорт. собственный вес тела
- единица веса; мера веса
a table [a system] of weights — таблица [система] мер веса
apothecaries’ weight — аптекарский вес
- правильный, полный, нужный вес
to be under [over] weight — весить слишком мало [много]
- тяжесть; груз, нагрузка, давление
dead weight — тех. собственный вес
under its own weight — под собственной тяжестью
keep the papers down with a weight — прижмите бумаги чем-нибудь тяжёлым
weight of roof, roof weight — горн. давление кровли, вторичное горное давление
weight per axle — спец. нагрузка на ось
- бремя (забот, работы и т. п.)
that’s a great weight off my mind — у меня с души камень свалился
he felt the weight of years — годы давали себя знать
ещё 12 вариантов
глагол ↓
- утяжелять; подвешивать гирю, грузило и т. п.
to weight a stick with lead — утяжелить палку свинцом
- искусственно утяжелять
to weight silk — текст. утяжелять шёлк
to weight sugar — подмачивать сахар
- придавать вес, определённую направленность
circumstances weighted in his favour — обстоятельства сложились в его пользу
- взвешивать, устанавливать вес
- оценивать (результаты опыта и т. п.)
- стат. взвешивать
Мои примеры
Словосочетания
bowed down by the weight of responsibility — согнулся под тяжестью ответственности
a pliant branch bent low with the weight of ripe fruit — упругая ветка, низко склонившаяся под тяжестью спелых фруктов
to chuck one’s weight about / around — держаться надменно
gain in weight — увеличение веса
to groan under / beneath / with the weight of oppression — сгибаться под гнётом
to handle silk to judge its weight — прикинуть шёлк на вес
increase in weight — прибавка в весе, привес
weight limit — ограничение веса
loss in weight — потеря в весе
to pack by weight — фасовать по весу
part by weight — доля по весу, весовая доля
percent by weight — весовой процент
Примеры с переводом
She’s lost a lot of weight.
Она сильно похудела.
This is an argument of weight.
Это веский довод.
Her weight is 105 pounds.
Её вес составляет сто пять футов. (47,63 кг.)
You shouldn’t worry about your weight.
О своём весе вам волноваться не стоит.
He took off weight every day.
Он сбавлял в весе каждый день.
Sara’s convinced she has a weight problem.
Сара убеждена, что у неё проблемы с лишним весом.
The law weighted towards landlords.
Закон давал преимущество домовладельцам.
ещё 23 примера свернуть
Примеры, ожидающие перевода
His height and weight are in the 80th percentile for boys his age.
…special drying cloths that are so bibulous that they can absorb 10 times their weight in water…
…suckered millions of desperate dieters with their grossly inflated claims of successful weight loss…
Для того чтобы добавить вариант перевода, кликните по иконке ☰, напротив примера.
Фразовые глаголы
weight down — тянуть вниз, отягощать, оттягивать
Возможные однокоренные слова
overweight — избыточный вес, перевес, весящий больше нормы, перегружать, обременять
weightless — невесомый
weighty — весомый, веский, тяжелый, важный, обременительный
weighted — утяжеленный, средневзвешенный
weightiest — самый важный
weighting — весить, нагружать, увеличивать вес, отягощать, обременять, подвешивать гирю
underweight — недовес, с недовесом
weightily — тяжело, увесисто, веско, важно, обременительно, тяжело
Формы слова
verb
I/you/we/they: weight
he/she/it: weights
ing ф. (present participle): weighting
2-я ф. (past tense): weighted
3-я ф. (past participle): weighted
noun
ед. ч.(singular): weight
мн. ч.(plural): weights
English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Middle English weight, weiȝte, weght, wight, from Old English wiht, ġewiht (“weight”), from Proto-Germanic *wihtiz («weight»; compare *weganą (“to move”)), from Proto-Indo-European *weǵʰ- (“to move; pull; draw; drive”).
Cognate with Scots wecht, weicht (“weight”), Saterland Frisian Wächte (“scale”), Gewicht (“weight”), West Frisian gewicht (“weight”), Dutch gewicht (“weight”), German Low German Wicht, Gewicht (“weight”), German Wucht (“massiveness, force”), Gewicht (“weight”).
Pronunciation[edit]
- enPR: wāt, IPA(key): /weɪt/
- Rhymes: -eɪt
- Homophone: wait
Noun[edit]
weight (countable and uncountable, plural weights)
- The force on an object due to the gravitational attraction between it and the Earth (or whatever astronomical object it is primarily influenced by).
- An object used to make something heavier.
- A standardized block of metal used in a balance to measure the mass of another object.
- Importance or influence.
- 1907 Alonso de Espinosa, Hakluyt Society & Sir Clements Robert Markham, The Guanches of Tenerife: the holy image of Our Lady of Candelaria, and the Spanish conquest and settlement, Printed for the Hakluyt Society, p116
- Another knight came to settle on the island, a man of much weight and position, on whom the Adelantados of all the island relied, and who was made a magistrate.
- 1945 Mikia Pezas, The price of liberty, I. Washburn, Inc., p11
- «You surely are a man of some weight around here,» I said.
- 1907 Alonso de Espinosa, Hakluyt Society & Sir Clements Robert Markham, The Guanches of Tenerife: the holy image of Our Lady of Candelaria, and the Spanish conquest and settlement, Printed for the Hakluyt Society, p116
- (weightlifting) An object, such as a weight plate or barbell, used for strength training.
-
He’s working out with weights.
-
- (lubricants) viscosity rating.
- (physics) Mass (atomic weight, molecular weight, etc.) (in restricted circumstances)
- (physics, proscribed) Synonym of mass (in general circumstances)
- (measurement) Mass (net weight, troy weight, carat weight, etc.).
- (statistics) A variable which multiplies a value for ease of statistical manipulation.
- (topology) The smallest cardinality of a base.
- (typography) The boldness of a font; the relative thickness of its strokes.
- (visual art) The relative thickness of a drawn rule or painted brushstroke, line weight.
- (visual art) The illusion of mass.
- (visual art) The thickness and opacity of paint.
- Pressure; burden.
-
the weight of care or business
-
c. 1603–1606, William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of King Lear”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act V, scene iii]:
-
The weight of this sad time.
-
-
- The resistance against which a machine acts, as opposed to the power which moves it.
- (slang, uncountable) Shipments of (often illegal) drugs.
-
He was pushing weight.
-
- (slang, countable) One pound of drugs, especially cannabis.
- 2002, Nicholas Dorn, Karim Murji, Nigel South, Traffickers: Drug Markets and Law Enforcement (page 5)
- [I was] doing a weight [1 lb. at that time] a week, sometimes more, sometimes less.
-
2009, Martina Cole, The Ladykiller:
-
The ones the CIB should be looking out for, to her mind, were the officers who raided a flat, found a couple of weights of cannabis and stashed half of it before they made the collar. The cannabis would make its way back on to the street […]
-
- 2002, Nicholas Dorn, Karim Murji, Nigel South, Traffickers: Drug Markets and Law Enforcement (page 5)
- (criminal slang, dated) Money.
- 1974, Martin R. Haskell, Lewis Yablonsky, Crime and Delinquency (page 96)
- No matter how much money he makes, he is still a soldier, but he has the weight.
- 1974, Martin R. Haskell, Lewis Yablonsky, Crime and Delinquency (page 96)
- Weight class
-
1848 November – 1850 December, William Makepeace Thackeray, The History of Pendennis. […], volume (please specify |volume=I or II), London: Bradbury and Evans, […], published 1849–1850, →OCLC:
-
You’re no match for ’em. You ain’t up to their weight. It’s like little Black Strap standing up to Tom Spring,—the Black’s a pretty fighter but, Law bless you, his arm ain’t long enough to touch Tom,—and I tell you, you’re going it with fellers beyond your weight.
-
-
Alternative forms[edit]
- wt. (abbreviation)
Coordinate terms[edit]
- mass
- inertial mass
- gravitational mass
Derived terms[edit]
- axle weight
- balance weight, balanceweight
- bantamweight
- biweight
- body weight, bodyweight
- counterweight
- curb weight
- featherweight
- flyweight
- heavyweight
- kerb weight
- lightweight
- lose weight
- net weight
- overweight
- paperweight
- pseudoweight
- pull one’s weight
- put on weight
- throw one’s weight around
- throw-weight
- topweight
- triweight
- underweight
- weight class
- weight loss
- weight of the world
- weight-saving
- weight-watcher
- weightful, weightfully, weightfulness
- weightless
- weightlifter
- weightlifting
- weightometer
- weighty
- welterweight
[edit]
- weigh
Descendants[edit]
- → Japanese: ウエイト (ueito)
- → Burmese: ဝိတ် (wit)
Translations[edit]
force due to gravity
- Afrikaans: gewig
- Albanian: peshë (sq) f
- Amharic: ክብደት (kəbdät)
- Arabic: وَزْن (ar) (wazn)
- Armenian: կշիռ (hy) (kšiṙ), քաշ (hy) (kʿaš), ծանրություն (hy) (canrutʿyun)
- Assamese: ওজন (üzon)
- Asturian: pesu m
- Azerbaijani: çəki (az), ağırlıq (az), vəzn
- Basque: pisu
- Belarusian: ва́га f (váha)
- Bengali: ওজন (bn) (ōjon)
- Breton: pouez (br) m
- Bulgarian: тегло́ (bg) n (tegló)
- Burmese: အလေး (my) (a.le:)
- Catalan: pes (ca)
- Central Melanau: baat
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 重量 (zh) (zhòngliàng), (body weight) 體重/体重 (zh) (tǐzhòng)
- Czech: tíha (cs) f, váha (cs) f
- Danish: vægt c, tyngdekraft c
- Dutch: gewicht (nl)
- Esperanto: pezo
- Estonian: kaal
- Ewe: kpekpeme n
- Finnish: paino (fi)
- French: poids (fr)
- Friulian: pês m
- Galician: peso (gl) m
- Georgian: წონა (c̣ona)
- German: Gewicht (de) n
- Gothic: 𐌺𐌰𐌿𐍂𐌴𐌹 f (kaurei)
- Greek: βάρος (el) n (város)
- Ancient: βάρος n (báros)
- Hawaiian: kaumaha
- Hebrew: מִשְׁקָל (he) m (mishqál)
- Hindi: भार (hi) m (bhār)
- Hungarian: súly (hu)
- Icelandic: þyngd (is)
- Ido: pezo (io)
- Ilocano: dagsen
- Indonesian: berat (id), bobot (id)
- Irish: meáchan m
- Italian: peso (it) m
- Japanese: (objects) 重さ (ja) (omosa), (general) 重量 (ja) (jūryō), (living things) 体重 (ja) (taijū)
- Kapampangan: bayat
- Kazakh: салмақ (salmaq)
- Khmer: ទម្ងន់ (km) (tumngŭən)
- Korean: 중량(重量) (ko) (jungnyang), 무게 (ko) (muge), 체중 (ko) (chejung) (body weight)
- Kyrgyz: салмак (ky) (salmak)
- Ladin: peis m
- Lao: ນ້ຳໜັກ (nam nak), ນ້ຳຫນັກ (nam nak)
- Latin: pondus n
- Latvian: svars m
- Lithuanian: svoris (lt) m
- Lombard: pes
- Luxembourgish: Gewiicht n
- Macedonian: тежина f (težina)
- Malay: berat (ms)
- Malayalam: ഭാരം (ml) (bhāraṃ)
- Manchu: ᡨᠣᠣᠰᡝ (toose)
- Maori: taimaha
- Maranao: timbang
- Mongolian: жин (mn) (žin), дэнс (mn) (dens)
- Neapolitan: pisemo m
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: vekt (no) m or f
- Occitan: pes (oc) m
- Old English: ġewiht n
- Oriya: ଭାର (or) (bharô)
- Oromo: ulfina
- Ossetian: уӕз (wæz)
- Persian: وزن (fa) (vazn)
- Piedmontese: peis m
- Plautdietsch: Wicht (nds) f
- Polish: ciężar (pl) m, waga (pl) f
- Portuguese: peso (pt)
- Romanian: greutate (ro) f
- Romansch: paisa f, peisa f, pesa f, pais m
- Russian: вес (ru) m (ves)
- Sanskrit: गुरुत्व (sa) n (gurutva)
- Sardinian: pesu m, pessu
- Scots: weicht
- Scottish Gaelic: cudrom m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: тежина f
- Roman: težina (sh) f
- Sicilian: pisu (scn) m
- Sinhalese: බර (bara)
- Slovak: váha f
- Slovene: teža (sl) f
- Somali: culays
- Spanish: peso (es) m
- Swahili: uzani (sw)
- Swedish: tyngd (sv) c, vikt (sv) c
- Tagalog: bigat
- Tajik: вазн (vazn)
- Tamil: please add this translation if you can
- Telugu: భారము (te) (bhāramu), బరువు (te) (baruvu)
- Thai: น้ำหนัก (th) (nám-nàk)
- Tocharian B: krāmär
- Turkish: ağırlık (tr)
- Turkmen: agyrlyk (tk)
- Ukrainian: ва́га (uk) f (váha)
- Uzbek: ogʻirlik (uz), vazn (uz)
- Venetian: pexo m
- Vietnamese: trọng lượng (vi) (重量), cân nặng
- Welsh: pwysau (cy) m pl
- Yiddish: געוויכט n (gevikht)
object to make something heavier
- Arabic: ثِقْل (ar) m (ṯiql)
- Armenian: բեռ (hy) (beṙ), ծանրություն (hy) (canrutʿyun)
- Bulgarian: тежест (bg) f (težest)
- Catalan: pes (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 配重 (zh) (pèizhòng)
- Czech: závaží (cs) n
- Dutch: gewicht (nl)
- Finnish: paino (fi)
- French: poids (fr), lest (fr) m
- German: Gewicht (de) n
- Greek: βάρος (el) n (város)
- Hebrew: מִשְׁקֹלֶת (he) f (mishqólet)
- Hungarian: súly (hu)
- Indonesian: pemberat (id)
- Italian: peso (it) m
- Japanese: 重り (ja) (omori)
- Latvian: svars m, atsvars m
- Luxembourgish: Gewiicht n
- Malay: pemberat (ms)
- Malayalam: ഭാരം (ml) (bhāraṃ)
- Maori: tāwē (to add to an anchor), wēti, taumaha, toimaha
- Norwegian: vekt (no)
- Old English: ġewiht n
- Polish: ciężarek (pl) m
- Portuguese: peso (pt)
- Romanian: greutate (ro) f
- Russian: груз (ru) m (gruz)
- Scots: weicht
- Spanish: pesa (es) f
- Swedish: vikt (sv) c, tyngd (sv) c
- Telugu: బరువు (te) (baruvu)
standardized measuring weight
- Arabic: ثِقْل (ar) m (ṯiql)
- Armenian: կշռաքար (hy) (kšṙakʿar)
- Bulgarian: теглилка (bg) f (teglilka)
- Catalan: pes (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 砝碼/砝码 (zh) (fámǎ)
- Czech: závaží (cs) n
- Estonian: kaaluma
- Finnish: punnus (fi)
- French: poids (fr) m
- Greek: ζύγι (el) n (zýgi), σταθμά (el) n pl (stathmá), σταθμίον n (stathmíon)
- Ancient: σταθμίον n (stathmíon)
- Hebrew: מִשְׁקֹלֶת (he) f (mishqólet)
- Hungarian: súly (hu)
- Japanese: 分銅 (ja) (fundō)
- Korean: 체중 (ko) (chejung)
- Maori: maihea
- Old English: ġewiht n
- Persian: وزنه (fa) (vazne)
- Polish: ciężarek (pl) m, odważnik (pl) m
- Portuguese: peso (pt) m
- Russian: ги́ря (ru) f (gírja)
- Scots: weicht
- Slovak: závažie n
- Spanish: peso (es) m
- Swedish: vikt (sv) c
- Turkish: ağırlık (tr)
importance or influence
- Bulgarian: влияние (bg) n (vlijanie), авторитет (bg) m (avtoritet)
- Catalan: pes (ca) m
- Finnish: painoarvo (fi), merkitys (fi)
- Latin: auctōritās f
- Luxembourgish: Bedeitung f, Gewiicht n
- Portuguese: peso (pt) m
- Romanian: greutate (ro) f
- Russian: вес (ru) m (ves)
- Spanish: peso (es) m
weight for training muscles
- Arabic: ثِقْل (ar) m (ṯiql)
- Bulgarian: гира (bg) f (gira)
- Catalan: pes (ca) m
- Finnish: paino (fi)
- French: poids (fr) m
- German: Gewicht (de) n
- Greek: βάρη (el) n pl (vári)
- Hebrew: מִשְׁקֹלֶת (he) f (mishqólet)
- Hungarian: súly (hu)
- Italian: peso (it) m
- Japanese: 重り (ja) (omori)
- Persian: وزنه (fa) (vazne)
- Portuguese: peso (pt) m, haltere (pt) m
- Romanian: halteră (ro), haltere f pl, greutate (ro) f
- Russian: блин (ru) m (blin), ги́ря (ru) f (gírja) (dumbbell), ганте́ль (ru) f (gantɛ́lʹ) (barbell)
- Scots: weicht
- Spanish: pesa (es) f
- Swedish: vikt (sv) c, tyngd (sv) c
- Turkish: ağırlık (tr), halter (tr), dambıl
statistics: multiplier
- Arabic: وَزْن (ar) (wazn)
- Armenian: կշիռ (hy) (kšiṙ)
- Bulgarian: тегло (bg) n (teglo)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 權重/权重 (zh) (quánzhòng)
- Finnish: painokerroin, paino (fi), painotuskerroin, painotus (fi)
- Hungarian: súly (hu), súlyozás
- Italian: peso (it) m
- Japanese: 重さ (ja) (omosa), 重み (omomi)
- Malay: pemberat (ms)
- Portuguese: peso (pt) m
- Russian: вес (ru) m (ves)
- Scots: weicht
- Spanish: peso (es) m
- Swedish: vikt (sv) c
topology: the smallest cardinality of a base
- Finnish: paino (fi)
thickness and opacity of paint
Verb[edit]
weight (third-person singular simple present weights, present participle weighting, simple past and past participle weighted)
- (transitive) To add weight to something; to make something heavier.
- (transitive, dyeing) To load (fabrics) with barite, etc. to increase the weight.
- (transitive) To load, burden or oppress someone.
- (transitive, mathematics) To assign weights to individual statistics.
- (transitive) To bias something; to slant.
-
2020 March 19, Marcus Ashworth, “Cheap Sterling Has Reasons to Be Cheaper”, in The Washington Post[1]:
-
The U.K. economy is heavily weighted towards the service sector and the coronavirus pandemic could lead to a 10% fall in gross domestic product in the second quarter, according to economists at Jefferies.
-
-
- (transitive, horse racing) To handicap a horse with a specified weight.
- (transitive, sports) To give a certain amount of force to a throw, kick, hit, etc.
-
2008, Tom Valenta, Remember Me, Mrs V?: Caring for My Wife: Her Alzheimer’s and Others’ Stories[2], ReadHowYouWant:
-
With good peripheral vision he spots his teammate, Ray Evans, lurking in the scoring zone and sweeps a perfectly weighted pass to him.
-
-
Translations[edit]
oppress
- Bulgarian: обременявам (bg) (obremenjavam)
- Finnish: kuormittaa (fi), raskauttaa
- Italian: gravare (it)
- Romanian: îngreuna (ro)
- Swedish: tynga (sv)
Examples from texts
Codeword Weight Distribution
Распределение весовых коэффициентов кодовых слов
Sklar, Bernard / Digital Communications: Fundamentals and ApplicationsСкляр, Бернард / Цифровая связь. Теоретические основы и практическое применение
Цифровая связь. Теоретические основы и практическое применение
Скляр, Бернард
© Издательский дом «Вильямc», 2003
© Prentice Hall PTR, 2001
Digital Communications: Fundamentals and Applications
Sklar, Bernard
Weight Reducing Composition
Композиция для похудания
Weight of transported cargo and distribution of load on vehicle axles shall not exceed the limits specified by the manufacturer and the plated weight of the vehicle.
Вес перевозимого груза и распределение нагрузки по осям транспортного средства не должны превышать значений, установленных заводом-изготовителем.
Weight of mice and also animals’ mortality were registered.
Учитывали вес тела мышей, а также смертность животных.
Other Buses, Light Vehicles Towing Trailers, Heavy Goods Vehicles >3500 kg Gross Vehicle Weight
Другие автобусы, трейлеры на буксире у легковых автомобилей, грузовые автомобили с разрешенной максимальной массой от 3 500 кг
«Weight» is the force with which a body pulls at something holding it up or presses down, on something supporting it.
«Весом» тела мы называем силу, с которой тело тянет точку подвеса или давит на свою опору.
Перельман, Яков / Занимательная физика. Часть 1Perelman, Yakov / Physics for entertainment. Book 1
Physics for entertainment. Book 1
Perelman, Yakov
Занимательная физика. Часть 1
Перельман, Яков
Weight crashed back onto her, and she knelt, clinging to the beam.
Вес вернулся к ней, как всегда, резко, и она опустилась на колени, ухватившись за балку, чтобы не упасть.
Westerfeld, Scott / The Secret HourВестерфельд, Скотт / Тайный час
Тайный час
Вестерфельд, Скотт
© 2004 by Alloy Entertainment and Scott David Westerfield
© Перевод.Н. Сосновская, 2005
© Издание на русском языке. ООО «Издательство «Эксмо», 2009
The Secret Hour
Westerfeld, Scott
© 2004 by Alloy Entertainment and Scott David Westerfield
Weight of a fiber package is 0.6 to 0.9 kg.
Вес упакованного волокна — 0,6-0,9 кг.
Weight gains were within the normal range.
Динамика нарастания массы тела у всех животных оставалась в пределах нормы.
Weight percentage, wt %.
Содержание, вес. %.
Weight of factors (percentages)
Веса факторов (в процентах)
© Организация Объединенных Наций, 2010 год
Weight loss of several kilograms in the weeks before is also common.
За несколько недель до болезни многие больные теряют несколько килограммов веса.
Hoffmann, Christian,Rockstroh, Jurgen,Kamps, Bernd / HIV Medicine 2006Хоффман, Кристиан,Рокстро, Юрген,Кампс, Бернд / Лечение ВИЧ-инфекции 2005
Лечение ВИЧ-инфекции 2005
Хоффман, Кристиан,Рокстро, Юрген,Кампс, Бернд
© 2003, 2004, 2005 Flying Publisher
HIV Medicine 2006
Hoffmann, Christian,Rockstroh, Jurgen,Kamps, Bernd
© 2006 by Flying Publisher
Weight lifter?”
Или бодибилдингом?
DeChancie, John / Castle KidnappedДе Ченси, Джон / Замок похищенный
Замок похищенный
Де Ченси, Джон
Castle Kidnapped
DeChancie, John
Weight changes of the samples in the course of dynamic TGA in air at the heating rate of 20 K/min.:
Изменение веса образцов в режиме динамического ТГА на воздухе при скорости нагревания 20 К/мин.:
Weight and Density of Planets and Stars
Вес и плотность планет и звёзд
Перельман, Яков / Занимательная астрономияPerelman, Yakov / Astronomy for Entertainment
Astronomy for Entertainment
Perelman, Yakov
Занимательная астрономия
Перельман, Яков
User translations
The part of speech is not specified
Collocations
Why You Can’t Lose Weight on a Diet
Почему Вы не можете терять вес на диете
absolute weight
абсолютный вес
actual net weight
реальная масса нетто
actual weight
действительный вес
actual weight
реальная масса
actual weight
фактический вес
advertising weight
рекламный вес
advertising weight
эффект рекламы
adhesion weight
сцепная масса
adhesion weight
сцепной вес
age-involution weight curve
кривая возрастной инволюции
aircraft all-up weight
полная масса воздушного судна
aircraft weight category
класс воздушного судна по массе
aircraft weight data
весовые данные воздушного судна
aircraft wet weight
полная масса воздушного судна
Other forms: weights; weighted
The weight of a cat on your lap might not bother you, but the weight of your 156 pound Rottweiler? Oh boy. Weight refers to the heaviness of a person or object.
In physics, weight is a precise measurement based on the force that gravity exerts on a mass. Got that? All meanings of the word weight are related to this sense of heaviness. Something that is important, like testimony at a trial or a serious conversation, can be described as having weight, even if you can’t put it on a scale.
Definitions of weight
-
noun
the vertical force exerted by a mass as a result of gravity
-
noun
an oppressive feeling of heavy force
“bowed down by the
weight of responsibility” -
verb
weight down with a load
-
noun
an artifact that is heavy
see moresee less-
types:
- show 17 types…
- hide 17 types…
-
bob
a hanging weight, especially a metal ball on a string
-
balance, counterbalance, counterpoise, counterweight, equaliser, equalizer
a weight that balances another weight
-
burden, load, loading
weight to be borne or conveyed
-
makeweight
a weight added to the scale to reach a required weight
-
paperweight
a weight used to hold down a stack of papers
-
sinker
a weight that sinks (as to hold nets or fishing lines under water)
-
burthen
a variant of `burden’
-
dead load
a constant load on a structure (e.g. a bridge) due to the weight of the supported structure itself
-
kite tail
a bob on a kite to provide balance
-
live load, superload
a variable load on a structure (e.g. a bridge) such as moving traffic
-
millstone
any load that is difficult to carry
-
overburden, overload
an excessive burden
-
overload
an electrical load that exceeds the available electrical power
-
plumb, plumb bob, plummet
the metal bob of a plumb line
-
sash weight
a counterweight for a sliding sash
-
sounding lead
a metal bob at the end of a sounding line
-
tare
(chemical analysis) a counterweight used in chemical analysis; consists of an empty container that counterbalances the weight of the container holding chemicals
-
type of:
-
artefact, artifact
a man-made object taken as a whole
-
noun
a unit used to measure weight
“he placed two
weights in the scale pan”-
synonyms:
weight unit
see moresee less-
types:
- show 22 types…
- hide 22 types…
-
troy unit
any of the unit of the troy system of weights
-
apothecaries’ unit, apothecaries’ weight
any weight unit used in pharmacy; an ounce is equal to 480 grains and a pound is equal to 12 ounces
-
arroba
a unit of weight used in some Spanish speaking countries
-
cattie, catty
any of various units of weight used in southeastern Asia (especially a Chinese measure equal to 500 grams)
-
crith
the weight of a liter of hydrogen (at 0 centigrade and 760 millimeters pressure)
-
frail
the weight of a frail (basket) full of raisins or figs; between 50 and 75 pounds
-
last
a unit of weight equal to 4,000 pounds
-
maund
a unit of weight used in Asia; has different values in different countries
-
obolus
a Greek unit of weight equal to one tenth of a gram
-
oka
a Turkish unit of weight equal to about 2.75 pounds
-
picul
a unit of weight used in some parts of Asia; approximately equal to 133 pounds (the load a grown man can carry)
-
pood
a Russian unit of weight equal to approximately 36 pounds
-
rotl
a unit of weight used in some Moslem countries near the Mediterranean; varies between one and five pounds
-
tael
a unit of weight used in east Asia approximately equal to 1.3 ounces
-
tod
a unit of weight for wool equal to about 28 pounds
-
welterweight
a weight of 28 pounds; sometimes imposed as a handicap in a horse race (such as a steeplechase)
-
grain
1/60 dram; equals an avoirdupois grain or 64.799 milligrams
-
scruple
a unit of apothecary weight equal to 20 grains
-
pennyweight
a unit of apothecary weight equal to 24 grains
-
drachm, drachma, dram
a unit of apothecary weight equal to an eighth of an ounce or to 60 grains
-
apothecaries’ ounce, ounce, troy ounce
a unit of apothecary weight equal to 480 grains or one twelfth of a pound
-
apothecaries’ pound, troy pound
an apothecary weight equal to 12 ounces or 373.242 grams
-
type of:
-
unit, unit of measurement
any division of quantity accepted as a standard of measurement or exchange
-
noun
a system of units used to express the weight of something
-
noun
sports equipment used in calisthenic exercises and weightlifting; it is not attached to anything and is raised and lowered by use of the hands and arms
-
synonyms:
exercising weight, free weight
see moresee less-
types:
-
barbell
a bar to which heavy discs are attached at each end; used in weightlifting
-
dumbbell
an exercising weight; two spheres connected by a short bar that serves as a handle
-
type of:
-
sports equipment
equipment needed to participate in a particular sport
-
barbell
-
noun
the relative importance granted to something
“his opinion carries great
weight”-
synonyms:
weightiness
-
noun
(statistics) a coefficient assigned to elements of a frequency distribution in order to represent their relative importance
-
-
synonyms:
angle, skew, slant
DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘weight’.
Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors.
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- Top Definitions
- Synonyms
- Quiz
- Related Content
- Examples
- British
- Scientific
- Cultural
- Idioms And Phrases
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
noun
the amount or quantity of heaviness or mass; amount a thing weighs.
Physics. the force that gravitation exerts upon a body, equal to the mass of the body times the local acceleration of gravity: commonly taken, in a region of constant gravitational acceleration, as a measure of mass.
a system of units for expressing heaviness or mass: avoirdupois weight.
a unit of heaviness or mass: The pound is a common weight in English-speaking countries.
a body of determinate mass, as of metal, for using on a balance or scale in weighing objects, substances, etc.
a specific quantity of a substance that is determined by weighing or that weighs a fixed amount: a half-ounce weight of gold dust.
any heavy load, mass, or object: Put down that weight and rest your arms.
an object used or useful solely because of its heaviness: the weights of a clock.
a mental or moral burden, as of care, sorrow, or responsibility: Knowing you are safe takes a weight off my mind.
importance, moment, consequence, or effective influence: an opinion of great weight.
Statistics. a measure of the relative importance of an item in a statistical population.
(of clothing, textiles, etc.)
- relative heaviness or thickness as related to warmth or to seasonal use (often used in combination): a winter-weight jacket.
- relative heaviness or thickness as related to use: a bolt of coat-weight woolen cloth.
Printing. (of type) the degree of blackness or boldness.
(especially in boxing) a division or class to which a contestant belongs according to how much he weighs: two brothers who fight professionally in the same weight.
the total amount the jockey, saddle, and leads must weigh on a racehorse during a race, according to the conditions of the race: Jacinto has a weight of 122 pounds in the seventh race.
the stress or accent value given a sound, syllable, or word.
verb (used with object)
to add weight to; load with additional weight: to weight sacks before dumping them overboard.
to load (fabrics, threads, etc.) with mineral or other matter to increase the weight or bulk.
to burden with or as if with weight (often followed by down): Financial worries have weighted that family down for years.
Statistics. to give a statistical weight to.
to bias or slant toward a particular goal or direction; manipulate: The teacher weighted the test so students who had read both books would make the highest marks.
to assign (a racehorse) a specific weight to carry in a race: The handicapper weighted Dapper Dan with 128 pounds.
QUIZ
CAN YOU ANSWER THESE COMMON GRAMMAR DEBATES?
There are grammar debates that never die; and the ones highlighted in the questions in this quiz are sure to rile everyone up once again. Do you know how to answer the questions that cause some of the greatest grammar debates?
Which sentence is correct?
Idioms about weight
by weight, according to measurement of heaviness or mass: Rates are determined by weight.
carry weight, to have importance or significance; influence: Her opinion is certain to carry weight.
pull one’s weight, to contribute one’s rightful share of work to a project or job: We will finish in time if we each pull our weight.Also pull one’s own weight.
throw one’s weight around / about, to use one’s power and influence, especially beyond the bounds of propriety, to secure some personal gain.
Origin of weight
First recorded before 1000; Middle English (noun); Old English wiht (cognate with Dutch wicht, German Gewicht ); see weigh1, -th1
OTHER WORDS FROM weight
weighter, nounself-weight, noun
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH weight
wait, weight
Words nearby weight
weigh down, weigh-in, weighman, weigh on, weigh one’s words, weight, weightage , weight belt, weight density, weighted, weighted average
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Words related to weight
burden, density, gravity, heft, load, pressure, substance, clout, consequence, emphasis, impact, influence, magnitude, power, prestige, significance, value, responsibility, strain, adiposity
How to use weight in a sentence
-
If your body weight is drastically different from your partner’s, you could end up sleeping under a blanket that inhibits your mobility.
-
This water would help support any astronauts during their stay, cutting down on the weight we’d have to shift out of Earth orbit.
-
Though these wool mittens aren’t waterproof, they will absorb 30 percent of their weight before they start to feel damp.
-
The weight of the keyboard may not matter if it will be mostly stationary, but if you’ll be transporting it or using it on your lap, you’ll want to be sure it’s not dragging you down.
-
The new study of silk-based weight lifting strikes Symone Alexander, a chemical engineer with wide-ranging interests at Auburn University in Alabama, as “very cool.”
-
A lot of people ring in the New Year with vows to lose weight and exercise.
-
Yet we keep doing the cleanses, buying the meal replacement bars, and joining Weight Watchers.
-
The problem, says UC Davis physiologist and nutritionist Linda Bacon, is that very few people can lose weight and keep it off.
-
Then the commercial weight loss behemoths Weight Watchers and Jenny Craig joined this crowded field.
-
The rule of law, you see, buckles, bends and sometimes crumbles under the weight of racism, sexism, and classism.
-
Of course, considerations of weight have to be taken into account, but the more mould round the roots the better.
-
Results are in terms of bulk of precipitate, which must not be confused with percentage by weight.
-
The weight percentage can be found by referring to Purdy’s tables, given later.
-
But for the most part even industry and endowment were powerless against the inertia of custom and the dead-weight of environment.
-
All the eight planets added together only make one-seven-hundredth part of his weight.
British Dictionary definitions for weight
noun
a measure of the heaviness of an object; the amount anything weighs
physics the vertical force experienced by a mass as a result of gravitation. It equals the mass of the body multiplied by the acceleration of free fall. Its units are units of force (such as newtons or poundals) but is often given as a mass unit (kilogram or pound)Symbol: W
a system of units used to express the weight of a substancetroy weight
a unit used to measure weightthe kilogram is the weight used in the metric system
any mass or heavy object used to exert pressure or weigh down
an oppressive forcethe weight of cares
any heavy loadthe bag was such a weight
the main or greatest force: preponderancethe weight of evidence
importance, influence, or consequencehis opinion carries weight
statistics one of a set of coefficients assigned to items of a frequency distribution that are analysed in order to represent the relative importance of the different items
printing the apparent blackness of a printed typeface
slang a pound of a drug, esp cannabis
pull one’s weight informal to do one’s full or proper share of a task
throw one’s weight around informal to act in an overauthoritarian or aggressive manner
verb (tr)
to add weight to
to burden or oppress
to add importance, value, etc, to one side rather than another; bias; favoura law weighted towards landlords
statistics to attach a weight or weights to
to make (fabric, threads, etc) heavier by treating with mineral substances, etc
Derived forms of weight
weighter, noun
Word Origin for weight
Old English wiht; related to Old Frisian, Middle Dutch wicht, Old Norse vētt, German Gewicht
Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Scientific definitions for weight
The force with which an object near the Earth or another celestial body is attracted toward the center of the body by gravity. An object’s weight depends on its mass and the strength of the gravitational pull. The weight of an object in an aircraft flying at high altitude is less than its weight at sea level, since the strength of gravity decreases with increasing distance from the Earth’s surface. The SI unit of weight is the newton, though units of mass such as grams or kilograms are used more informally to denote the weight of some mass, understood as the force acting on it in a gravitational field with a strength of one G. The pound is also still used as a unit of weight.
A system of such measures, such as avoirdupois weight or troy weight.
Usage
Although most hand-held calculators can translate pounds into kilograms, an absolute conversion factor between these two units is not technically sound. A pound is a unit of force, and a kilogram is a unit of mass. When the unit pound is used to indicate the force that a gravitational field exerts on a mass, the pound is a unit of weight. Mistaking weight for mass is tantamount to confusing the electric charges on two objects with the forces of attraction (or repulsion) between them. Like charge, the mass of an object is an intrinsic property of that object: electrons have a unique mass, protons have a unique mass, and some particles, such as photons, have no mass. Weight, on the other hand, is a force due to the gravitational attraction between two bodies. For example, one’s weight on the Moon is 16 of one’s weight on Earth. Nevertheless, one’s mass on the Moon is identical to one’s mass on Earth. The reason that hand-held calculators can translate between units of weight and units of mass is that the majority of us use calculators on the planet Earth at sea level, where the conversion factor is constant for all practical purposes.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary
Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Cultural definitions for weight
The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition
Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Other Idioms and Phrases with weight
see by weight; carry weight; dead weight; pull one’s weight; put on weight; throw one’s weight around; worth one’s weight in gold;
The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
noun
- the vertical force exerted by a mass as a result of gravity
- sports equipment used in calisthenic exercises and weightlifting; it is not attached to anything and is raised and lowered by use of the hands and arms
- the relative importance granted to something
his opinion carries great weight
the progression implied an increasing weightiness of the items listed
- an artifact that is heavy
- an oppressive feeling of heavy force
bowed down by the weight of responsibility
- a system of units used to express the weight of something
- a unit used to measure weight
he placed two weights in the scale pan
- (statistics) a coefficient assigned to elements of a frequency distribution in order to represent their relative importance (syn: weighting)
verb
Extra examples
Please indicate your height and weight on the form.
Her weight is 105 pounds.
The boat sank under the weight of the cargo.
Those columns have to be strong enough to support the weight of the roof.
He stays in good shape by lifting weights.
I use pie weights to keep the pie crust from bubbling when I bake it.
I weighted the fishing line with a lead sinker.
…weighted the car with a ton of furniture and then headed off for college…
The table collapsed under the weight of the food.
This is an argument of weight.
The weight of the evidence is against the defendant.
The strokes should come with greater weight.
Fishing nets were weighted with lead.
The House of Commons is not weighted with nominees of the landed class.
The law weighted towards landlords.
Phrasal verbs
Word forms
verb
I/you/we/they: weight
he/she/it: weights
present participle: weighting
past tense: weighted
past participle: weighted
noun
singular: weight
plural: weights
How Do You Spell WEIGHT?
Correct spelling for the English word «weight» is [wˈe͡ɪt], [wˈeɪt], [w_ˈeɪ_t] (IPA phonetic alphabet).
Table of Contents
Anagrams for weight
- 3 letters
- 4 letters
- 5 letters
Common Misspellings for WEIGHT
Below is the list of 99 misspellings for the word «weight».
- wieghed
- eighte
- widgit
- maight
- eitgh
- weidth
- kight
- withte
- hieght
- wmight
- weaght
- weish
- withot
- witgh
- weighth
- theight
- ewight
- wieght
- caight
- wiegh
- wiehg
- fieght
- cauight
- wirght
- dewight
- woithout
- weught
- weighht
- wihit
- heoght
- whighed
- whigh
- wihte
- witht
- wisht
- weitght
- wirghter
- weuight
- toight
- wenough
- waighs
- neght
- whaght
- weith
- eaight
- waeight
- eghty
- waight
- mieght
- jight
- wiotht
- weighters
- wechert
- haight
- dight
- twight
- wicht
- weightage
- wieghted
- withut
- weigfht
- weitgh
- mmight
- weighst
- weigth
- loight
- muight
- wheich
- tieght
- weghts
- iight
- waght
- weigtht
- weght
- niight
- caiught
- whight
- whaight
- weiught
- moight
- weighd
- weigjt
- wichata
- wheighed
- heaight
- weightbear
- wieghtier
- weihgt
- gight
- weeight
- leght
- weighte
- weich
- lighweight
- wieghs
- waights
- weagh
- eyght
- feight
Similar spelling words for WEIGHT
- weighty,
- west,
- weast,
- weist,
- wight.
Plural form of
WEIGHT is WEIGHTS
40 words made out of letters WEIGHT
3 letters
- het,
- wei,
- hew,
- wit,
- hie,
- get,
- tie,
- wig,
- wet,
- teg,
- the,
- ige.
4 letters
- weit,
- thew,
- igwe,
- twig,
- wiht,
- thie,
- gihe,
- whit,
- thge,
- wtih,
- tihg,
- eiht,
- with,
- whet,
- geht,
- htwe,
- iteh,
- whig,
- ithe,
- tegh.
5 letters
- eigth,
- weigh,
- withe,
- weith,
- white,
- wight,
- gheit,
- eight.
Conjugate verb Weight
CONDITIONAL PERFECT
I
would have weighted
you
would have weighted
he/she/it
would have weighted
we
would have weighted
they
would have weighted
I
would have weight
you
would have weight
he/she/it
would have weight
we
would have weight
they
would have weight
CONDITIONAL PERFECT PROGRESSIVE
I
would have been weighting
you
would have been weighting
he/she/it
would have been weighting
we
would have been weighting
they
would have been weighting
CONDITIONAL PRESENT
I
would weight
you
would weight
he/she/it
would weight
we
would weight
they
would weight
CONDITIONAL PRESENT PROGRESSIVE
I
would be weighting
you
would be weighting
he/she/it
would be weighting
we
would be weighting
they
would be weighting
FUTURE
I
will weight
you
will weight
he/she/it
will weight
we
will weight
they
will weight
FUTURE CONTINUOUS
I
will be weighting
you
will be weighting
he/she/it
will be weighting
we
will be weighting
they
will be weighting
FUTURE PERFECT
I
will have weighted
you
will have weighted
he/she/it
will have weighted
we
will have weighted
they
will have weighted
FUTURE PERFECT CONTINUOUS
I
will have been weighting
you
will have been weighting
he/she/it
will have been weighting
we
will have been weighting
they
will have been weighting
IMPERATIVE
you
weight
we
let´s weight
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
to weight
PAST CONTINUOUS
I
was weighting
you
were weighting
he/she/it
was weighting
we
were weighting
they
were weighting
PAST PARTICIPLE
weighted
PAST PERFECT
I
had weighted
you
had weighted
he/she/it
had weighted
we
had weighted
they
had weighted
PAST PERFECT CONTINUOUS
I
had been weighting
you
had been weighting
he/she/it
had been weighting
we
had been weighting
they
had been weighting
PRESENT
I
weight
you
weight
he/she/it
weights
we
weight
they
weight
PRESENT CONTINUOUS
I
am weighting
you
are weighting
he/she/it
is weighting
we
are weighting
they
are weighting
PRESENT PARTICIPLE
weighting
PRESENT PERFECT
I
have weighted
you
have weighted
he/she/it
has weighted
we
have weighted
they
have weighted
PRESENT PERFECT CONTINUOUS
I
have been weighting
you
have been weighting
he/she/it
has been weighting
we
have been weighting
they
have been weighting
PRESENT SUBJUNCTIVE
he/she/it
weight
SIMPLE PAST
I
weighted
you
weighted
he/she/it
weighted
we
weighted
they
weighted
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weighted
The past tense of weight is weighted
Table Of Contents:
- weighted
- The Forms of Weight
- Conjugate Weight
- Weight in Present Simple (Indefinite) Tense
- Weight in Present Continuous (Progressive) Tense
- Weight in Present Perfect Tense
- Weight in Present Perfect Continuous Tense
- Weight in Past Simple (Indefinite) Tense
- Weight in Past Continuous (Progressive) Tense
- Weight in Past Perfect Tense
- Weight in Past Perfect Continuous Tense
- Weight in Future Simple (Indefinite) Tense
- Weight in Future Continuous (Progressive) Tense
- Weight in Future Perfect Tense
- Weight in Future Perfect Continuous Tense
The Forms of Weight
Infinitive | to weight |
Present Tense | weight / weights |
Past Tense | weighted |
Present Participle | weighting |
Past Participle | weighted |
Weight in Present Simple (Indefinite) Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I weight | We weight |
You weight | You weight |
He/She/It weights | They weight |
Weight in Present Continuous (Progressive) Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I am weighting | We are weighting |
You are weighting | You are weighting |
He/She/It is weighting | They are weighting |
Weight in Present Perfect Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I have weighted | We have weighted |
You have weighted | You have weighted |
He/She/It has weighted | They have weighted |
Weight in Present Perfect Continuous Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I have been weighting | We have been weighting |
You have been weighting | You have been weighting |
He/She/It has been weighting | They have been weighting |
Weight in Past Simple (Indefinite) Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I weighted | We weighted |
You weighted | You weighted |
He/She/It weighted | They weighted |
Weight in Past Continuous (Progressive) Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I was weighting | We were weighting |
You were weighting | You were weighting |
He/She/It was weighting | They were weighting |
Weight in Past Perfect Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I had weighted | We had weighted |
You had weighted | You had weighted |
He/She/It had weighted | They had weighted |
Weight in Past Perfect Continuous Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I had been weighting | We had been weighting |
You had been weighting | You had been weighting |
He/She/It had been weighting | They had been weighting |
Weight in Future Simple (Indefinite) Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I will weight | We will weight |
You will weight | You will weight |
He/She/It will weight | They will weight |
Weight in Future Continuous (Progressive) Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I will be weighting | We will be weighting |
You will be weighting | You will be weighting |
He/She/It will be weighting | They will be weighting |
Weight in Future Perfect Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I will have weighted | We will have weighted |
You will have weighted | You will have weighted |
He/She/It will have weighted | They will have weighted |
Weight in Future Perfect Continuous Tense
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
I will have been weighting | We will have been weighting |
You will have been weighting | You will have been weighting |
He/She/It will have been weighting | They will have been weighting |