"newton" 怎么发音
word
/ˈnutən/
NOO-tuhn
/njˈuːtən/
NYOO-tuhn
释义
A 'newton' is the standard unit of force in the International System of Units (SI), defined as the force needed to accelerate a 1 kg mass by 1 meter per second squared. It is also used as a surname, most famously by physicist Isaac Newton.
IPA 音标
美式英语
/ˈnutən/
英式英语
/njˈuːtən/
简化发音
美式
NOO-tuhn
英式
NYOO-tuhn
语境中听
One newton is the force needed to move a 1 kg object at 1 meter per second squared.
The force of gravity on Earth is about 9.8 newtons for every kilogram of mass.
Isaac Newton discovered the laws of motion and gravity.
The scale shows a force of five newtons when I press on it.