Ounce
The ounce is the name of several different units of mass, weight, or volume used in most British derived customary systems of measurement.
The common avoirdupois ounce (approximately 28.3 g) is 1⁄16 of a common avoirdupois pound; this is the United States customary and British imperial ounce. It is primarily used in the United States to measure packaged foods and food portions, postal items, areal density of fabric and paper, boxing gloves, and so on, but is sometimes also elsewhere in the Anglosphere.
Besides the common ounce, several other ounces are in current use:
- The troy ounce of 31.1034768 grams is used for the mass of precious metals such as gold, silver, platinum, palladium, rhodium, etc.
- The ounce-force is a measure of weight, that is, force, based on 1 common ounce under standard gravity.
- The fluid ounce is a measure of volume.
Historically, a variety of different ounces measuring mass or volume were used in different jurisdictions by different trades.
Etymology
Ounce derives from Latin uncia, a unit that was one-twelfth (1⁄12)[1] of the Roman pound (libra). Ounce was borrowed twice: first into Old English as ynsan or yndsan from an unattested Vulgar Latin form with ts for c before i (palatalization) and second into Middle English through Anglo-Norman and Middle French (unce, once, ounce).[2] The abbreviation oz came later from the cognate Italian word onza (now spelled oncia).
Inch comes from the same Latin word, but differs because it was borrowed into Old English and underwent i-mutation or umlaut ([u] → [y]) and palatalization ([k] → [tʃ]).
Definitions
Historically, in different parts of the world, at different points in time, and for different applications, the ounce (or its translation) has referred to broadly similar but still slightly different standards of mass.
Variant | (grams) | (grains) |
---|---|---|
International avoirdupois ounce | 28.349523125 | 437.5 |
International troy ounce | 31.1034768 | 480 |
Apothecaries' ounce | ||
Maria Theresa ounce | 28.0668 | |
Spanish ounce (onza) | 28.75 | |
French ounce (once) | 30.59 | |
Portuguese ounce (onça) | 28.69 | |
Roman/Italian ounce (oncia) | 27.4 | |
Dutch metric ounce (ons) | 100 | |
Dutch (pre-metric) ounce (ons) | ca. 30 | |
Chinese metric ounce (盎司) | 50 | |
English Tower Ounce | 29.16 | 450 |
International avoirdupois ounce
The international avoirdupois ounce (abbreviated oz) is defined as exactly 28.349523125 g under the international yard and pound agreement of 1959, signed by the United States and countries of the Commonwealth of Nations.
In the avoirdupois system, sixteen ounces make up an avoirdupois pound, and the avoirdupois pound is defined as 7000 grains; one avoirdupois ounce is therefore equal to 437.5 grains.
The ounce is still a standard unit in the United States. In the United Kingdom it ceased to be a legal unit of measure in 2000, but is still in general usage on an informal basis and also as the indicator of portion sizes in restaurants.[3]
International troy ounce
A troy ounce (abbreviated oz t) is equal to 480 grains. Consequently, the international troy ounce is equal to exactly 31.1034768 grams. There are 12 troy ounces in the now obsolete troy pound.
Today, the troy ounce is used only to express the mass of precious metals such as gold, platinum, palladium, rhodium or silver. Bullion coins are the most common products produced and marketed in troy ounces, but precious metal bars also exist in gram and kilogram (kg) sizes. (A kilogram bullion bar contains 32.15074657 troy ounces.)
For historical measurement of gold,
Metric ounces
Some countries have redefined their ounces in the metric system.[5] For example, the German apothecaries ounce of 30 grams, is very close to the previously widespread Nuremberg ounce, but the divisions and multiples come out in metric.
In 1820, the Dutch redefined their ounce (in Dutch, ons) as 100 grams. In 1937 the IJkwet of the Netherlands officially abolished the term, but it is still commonly used. [6][7] Dutch amendments to the metric system, such as an ons or 100 grams, has been inherited, adopted, and taught in Indonesia beginning in elementary school. It is also listed as standard usage in Indonesia's national dictionary, the Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, and the government's official elementary-school curriculum.[8]
Apothecaries' ounce
The obsolete apothecaries' ounce (abbreviated ℥) equivalent to the troy ounce, was formerly used by apothecaries.
Maria Theresa ounce
"Maria Theresa ounce" was once introduced in Ethiopia and some European countries, which was equal to the weight of one Maria Theresa thaler, or 28.0668 g.[9][10] Both the weight and the value are the definition of one birr, still in use in present-day Ethiopia and formerly in Eritrea.
Spanish ounce
The Spanish pound (Spanish libra) was 460 g.[11] The Spanish ounce (Spanish onza) was 1⁄16 of a pound, i.e. 28.75 g.[12]
Tower ounce
The Tower ounce of 450 grains was used in the English mints, the principal one being in the Tower of London. It dates back to the Anglo-Saxon coinage weight standard. It was abolished in favour of the Troy ounce by Henry VIII in 1527.[13]
Ounce-force
An ounce-force is 1⁄16 of a pound-force, or 0.2780139 newtons.
The "ounce" in "ounce-force" is equivalent to an avoirdupois ounce; ounce-force is a measurement of force using avoirdupois ounces. It is customarily not identified or differentiated. The term has limited use in engineering calculations to simplify unit conversions between mass, force, and acceleration systems of calculations.
Fluid ounce
A fluid ounce (abbreviated fl oz, fl. oz. or oz. fl.) is a unit of volume equal to about 28.4 ml in the imperial system or about 29.6 ml in the US system. The fluid ounce is sometimes referred to simply as an "ounce" in applications where its use is implicit, such as bartending.
Other uses
Fabric weight
Ounces are also used to express the "weight", or more accurately the areal density, of a textile fabric in North America, Asia, or the UK, as in "16 oz denim". The number refers to the weight in ounces of a given amount of fabric, either a yard of a given width, or a square yard, where the depth of the fabric is a fabric-specific constant.[14]
Fabric type | Typical weight in ounces |
---|---|
Organza, voile, chiffon | 1–3 |
Most cottons, wools, silks, muslin, linen | 4–7 |
Denim, corduroy, twill, velvet | 7–16 |
Copper layer thickness of a printed circuit board
The most common unit of measure for the copper thickness on a printed circuit board (PCB) is ounces (oz), as in mass. It is the resulting thickness when the mass of copper is pressed flat and spread evenly over a one-square-foot area. 1 oz will roughly equal 34.7 µm.[15]
Notes and references
- uncia. Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short. A Latin Dictionary on Perseus Project.
- "ounce". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
- "The Units of Measurement Regulations 1995 (Article 4)". 2000-09-20. Retrieved 2009-01-26.
- London Bullion Market Association. "Market Basics". Archived from the original on 2012-03-08.
- Wittop Koning, D. A.; Houben, G. M. M. (1980). 2000 jaar gewichten in de nederlanden (in Dutch). Lochem-Poperinge: De Tijdstroom. ISBN 9060879651. (in Dutch)
- "Guide to The Hague – Where to turn". Archived from the original on 2008-03-16. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
- nl:Nederlands metriek stelsel
- Ons in KBBI
- Greenfield, Richard (1965). Ethiopia: a new political history. F. A. Praeger. p. 327.
- Ethiopia observer. 6. 1962. pp. 187–8.
- Diccionario de la Real Academia Española, 23rd edition, libra
- Diccionario de la Real Academia Española, 23rd edition, onza
- Robert Slater, An Inquiry into the Principles involved in the Decimalization of the Weights, Measures, and Monies of the United Kingdom (London: Arthur Hall, 1855), 11. books.google.com/books?id=nctVAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA11&lpg=PA11
- "How to shop the fabric market". Retrieved 2008-12-10.
- "Copper Thickness FAQ". Retrieved 2016-11-13.