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Hundred weight or hundredweight is a unit of measurement for mass in both the system of measurement used in the United Kingdom and Ireland (and previously throughout the British Commonwealth), and in the system used in the United States. However, its definition differs in the two systems.
In both systems, there are twenty hundredweights to a ton – in Imperial units this is the long ton of 2240 pounds (approximately equal to a metric tonne), and in US units it is the short ton of 2000 pounds. In both systems, the hundredweight is abbreviated cwt, where wt is an abbreviation for weight and c is an abbreviation for one hundred (since the Roman numeral C is equal to 100). Prior to the 15th century in England, a hundredweight used the old hundred of 108 lb, giving a ton of 2160 pounds. In some industries (notably forges) this old hundred was retained somewhat longer. The London hundredweight of 112 pounds eventually replaced the old hundred. The US unit is commonly used in shipping and in the exchange of futures. The Imperial unit is now little used in any country. In the UK and Ireland, the few household commodities that were commonly sold by the hundredweight, such as coal and some building materials, are now sold in 50 kg quantities. For all technical purposes metric units are now in use in both the UK and Ireland, while other Commonwealth countries have adopted the metric system in full. External link
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