-
Pood (Russian: пуд, romanized: pud, IPA: [put], plural: pudi or pudy) is a unit of m****
equal to 40 funt (фунт,
Russian pound).
Since 1899 it is set to...
- The
principle of
orthogonal design (abbreviated
POOD) was
developed by
database researchers David McGoveran and
Christopher J. Date in the
early 1990s...
- in use, an
ordinary one in
common use, and an apothecaries' system. The
pood was
first mentioned in a
number of do****ents of the
twelfth century. [citation...
- at the time
however was in
poods, thus the
licornes in this list were
actually quarter-
pood, half-
pood, 1-
pood, and 2-
pood. The 8-pounder
required two...
- were
formed from it; in particular, a
zolotnik was 1⁄96 of a funt, and a
pood was 40 fúnty. The Skålpund was a
Scandinavian measurement that
varied in...
-
Russian units of
measurement Obsolete Tatar units of
measurement Berkovets Pood "Russian
silver standards".
Antiques in Oxford.
Retrieved 2020-10-05. Conversion...
-
kyndnes yet, fir ald lang syn.
Chorus We twa hay rin
aboot the braes, an
pood the
gowans fyn; Bit weev
wandert monae a
weery fet, sin ald lang syn. Chorus...
- pre-revolutionary
recipes specified as much as half
pound of
saltpetre per a
pood of meat.
After the Revolution, the sausage-making was
largely concentrated...
- region, the
Minister of
Finance approved the duty-free
import of 125,000,000
poods of coal.
According to the
Russian Empire Census of 1897,
Congress Poland...
-
differentiated by
their barrel length and
weight 120 or 190
pood. 1
pood = 16.38 kg (36.1 lb) so the 120
pood barrel weighed 1,965 kg (4,332 lb) VS 3,112 kg (6...