Examples of using Kilo in English and their translations into Chinese
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Political
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Ecclesiastic
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Programming
Despite a 2012 law protecting domestic workers, she is lucky if she can afford half a kilo(one pound) of meat a week.
Sidetracking a bit- the standard size to which chickens are grown in Britain is 2.2 kilo, or about 5 pounds.
MF: One Friday afternoon my wife told me to go buy a kilo of Baklava.
Make it easy and give a kilo of lentils, you multiply immunization rate by six.
It takes 150,000 flowers to make a kilo of the spice, which sells for about 1,500 euros.
Can you imagine one kilo, trying to put that on in a week or so?
Kilo International- Kilo International was started in 1956, by Bob Gach, in LaVerne, CA.
According to this calculation, a kilo of DNA is sufficient to store all of today's data.
According to Mr Marshall, in terms of performance per kilo the Doves are now 100 times better than the state of the art five years ago.
Market prices are super cheap, with $1 easily getting you a kilo on standard items like fruit, vegetables, and rice.
These files vary in size, such as ranging from 100 to 500 kilo bytes where as some file size is larger than 1GB storage capacity.
Adolfo Durán Figueredo, an inmate at the Camagüey Kilo 8 prison, was reportedly beaten on 21 April 1997 by a guard from ward No. 6.
People are killing each other for a kilo of rice, or flour, or water.”….
You can see in this chart that kilo is about a thousand, mega is about a million, giga is about a billion, and so on.
(b) Mr. Michel Kilo, a writer and a journalist, was previously detained for two years and a half from 1980 until 1982.
On 29 August 2006, Mr. Kilo was prohibited from attending his mother' s funeral, in contrast to established practice in Syria.
What remains are the allegations that Mr. Al-Bunni, Mr. Michel Kilo and Mr. Mahmoud'Issa did not receive a fair trial.
Another layer of salt is added and the 15 kilo rear leg rests for 15 to 18 days.
The Nyali community, whose territory includes the Kilo Moto gold field, were attacked by both sides.
A kilo of wheat and a kilo of rice require 1,500 and 4,500 litres of water, respectively, while cotton needs 10,000 times its weight in water.