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Ounce   /aʊns/   Listen
Ounce

noun
1.
A unit of apothecary weight equal to 480 grains or one twelfth of a pound.  Synonyms: apothecaries' ounce, troy ounce.
2.
A unit of weight equal to one sixteenth of a pound or 16 drams or 28.349 grams.  Synonym: oz..
3.
Large feline of upland central Asia having long thick whitish fur.  Synonyms: Panthera uncia, snow leopard.



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"Ounce" Quotes from Famous Books



... and that though it grows sixty miles from the sea, yet every morning it is covered with saline globules, which are hard and splendid, appearing at a distance like dew; and that each plant furnishes about an ounce of fine salt every day, which the peasants collect and use as common salt, but esteem it superior in flavour.—Notes to Darwin's ...
— Flowers and Flower-Gardens • David Lester Richardson

... any modern explorer to merriment; but such as they were I managed to do a good deal of execution with them. One of them was a single-barrelled, smooth bore, fitted for percussion caps—a roer we called it—which threw a three-ounce ball, and was charged with a handful of coarse black powder. Many is the elephant that I killed with that roer, although it generally knocked me backwards when I fired it, which I only did under compulsion. The best of the lot, perhaps, was a double-barrelled No. 12 shot-gun, but it had ...
— Allan's Wife • H. Rider Haggard

... cripples; it's always young men who want to come for the night.... Why is that? And if they only wanted to warm themselves——But they are up to mischief. No, woman; there's no creature in this world as cunning as your female sort! Of real brains you've not an ounce, less than a starling, but for devilish slyness—oo-oo-oo! The Queen of Heaven protect us! There is the postman's bell! When the storm was only beginning I knew all that was in your mind. That's ...
— The Witch and Other Stories • Anton Chekhov

... Sha'abn,[FN286] and eyes like gazelles' eyne; and nose like the edge of scymitar fine and cheeks like anemones of blood-red shine; and mouth like Solomon's seal and sign and teeth like necklaces of pearls in line; and navel holding an ounce of oil of benzoin and waist more slender than his body whom love hath wasted and whom concealment hath made sick with pine and hind parts heavier than two hills of sand; briefly she was a volume of charms after his saying who ...
— The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Volume 5 • Richard F. Burton

... coin is generally called by foreigners "ichibu," which means "one bu." To talk of "a hundred ichibus" is as though a Japanese were to say "a hundred one shillings." Four bus make a riyo>, or ounce; and any sum above three bus is spoken of as so many riyos and bus—as 101 riyos and three bus equal 407 bus. The bu is worth about ...
— Tales of Old Japan • Algernon Bertram Freeman-Mitford


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