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gewîcht

Gewîcht is a term found in some Kurdish-language sources, where it appears as a transliteration or loan from the German Gewicht, meaning weight. Its usage is not universal across dialects, and the precise sense can vary by region and author. In many technical contexts, gewîcht is used to refer specifically to the physical concept of weight as a force, rather than simply to mass.

In physics, weight is the gravitational force exerted on a body by its location in a gravitational

Measurement of weight commonly uses scales that translate the gravitational force into a readable value. The

Distinctions are important: mass is an intrinsic property of an object and does not change with location,

See also: Mass, Gravity, Weight (physics), Units of measurement.

field.
It
is
the
product
of
an
object's
mass
and
the
local
acceleration
due
to
gravity:
W
=
m
×
g.
The
SI
unit
of
weight
is
the
newton
(N).
In
everyday
language,
weight
is
often
described
using
units
such
as
kilograms
or
pounds,
which
actually
reflect
mass
as
a
measure
of
matter
rather
than
force.
force
g
varies
with
location,
being
approximately
9.81
m/s²
on
the
Earth’s
surface,
but
different
on
the
Moon,
Mars,
or
other
celestial
bodies.
This
variability
means
an
object’s
weight
changes
with
where
it
is,
while
its
mass
remains
the
same.
whereas
weight
depends
on
the
strength
of
the
gravitational
field.
In
Kurdish
educational
and
scientific
texts,
gewîcht
may
appear
as
the
term
for
weight,
though
terminology
can
vary
and
translations
are
not
always
consistent.