What is pound?
A pound is a unit of mass in imperial and US customary systems equal to 16 ounces. It is widely used in the United States for body weight, grocery shopping, and general weight measurement.
Real-world uses
Pounds are the primary unit of weight in everyday American life—used for body weight, grocery items, luggage limits, and newborn birth weights. In the UK, pounds remain common for body weight despite official metrication.
History
The pound descends from the Roman "libra pondo" (a pound by weight), which is why its abbreviation is "lb." The avoirdupois pound was standardized internationally in 1959 as exactly 0.45359237 kilograms.
Common mistakes
Confusing pounds-mass (lb) with pounds-force (lbf), which are technically different quantities. Also, assuming the pound symbol "£" relates to weight—it actually denotes British currency, though both derive from "libra."
What is milligram?
A milligram is a metric unit of mass equal to one thousandth of a gram. It is commonly used in pharmaceutical dosing, nutritional content labelling, and laboratory chemistry.
Real-world uses
Milligrams are the standard unit for pharmaceutical dosages (e.g., 500 mg ibuprofen), nutritional supplement quantities, and blood test results such as cholesterol levels (mg/dL). Environmental scientists measure pollutant concentrations in mg/L.
History
The milligram was established with the metric system's prefix conventions in the 1790s. Its importance grew dramatically with modern pharmacology, where precise small-mass measurements became critical for drug safety and efficacy.
Common mistakes
Confusing milligrams with micrograms—a factor-of-1000 error that can be dangerous in medication dosing. The abbreviation "mcg" is sometimes used for micrograms to avoid confusion with "mg."
When is this conversion used?
Converting between pound and milligram is common when working across metric and imperial systems, such as international trade, travel between countries with different measurement standards, or following instructions from a different region. Body weight, grocery items, and luggage limits are commonly expressed in kilograms in most countries and pounds in the US and UK, making this one of the most frequently needed mass conversions.
Worked examples
1 pound = 453,592.37 milligram
1 milligram = 0.000001 kilogram
How to convert pound to milligram
To convert pound to milligram, multiply the value by 453,592.37.
To convert milligram back to pound, multiply by 0.0000022.
Measurement standards
The kilogram is defined by fixing the Planck constant to exactly 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ joule-seconds, as established at the 26th General Conference on Weights and Measures in 2018. This ended the last SI definition based on a physical artefact.
Did you know?
The International Prototype of the Kilogram, a platinum-iridium cylinder stored near Paris since 1889, was found to have drifted by about 50 micrograms relative to its copies over a century — roughly the mass of a fingerprint.
Quick reference: pound to milligram
| pound | milligram |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 45,359.237 |
| 0.5 | 226,796.185 |
| 1 | 453,592.37 |
| 2 | 907,184.74 |
| 5 | 2,267,961.85 |
| 10 | 4,535,923.7 |
| 25 | 11,339,809.25 |
| 50 | 22,679,618.5 |
| 100 | 45,359,237 |
| 250 | 113,398,092.50000001 |
| 500 | 226,796,185.00000003 |
| 1,000 | 453,592,370.00000006 |
Common values
| pound | milligram | |
|---|---|---|
| A paperclip | 2.20462262 pound | 1,000,000 milligram |
| A smartphone | 385.80895882 pound | 175,000,000 milligram |
| A bag of sugar | 2.20462262 pound | 1,000,000 milligram |
| Average adult human | 154.32358353 pound | 70,000,000 milligram |
| A small car | 2,645.54714622 pound | 1.200000e+09 milligram |