What do Stone, Pound, Tonne, Gram, and Ounce have in common in LinkedIn Pinpoint #546?
Each clue ultimately points back to "Units of mass". The walkthrough below shows the specific links and supporting evidence.
Resposta permanente & walkthrough (arquivo Pinpoint Today)
Pinpoint Answer Today asks: what links Stone, Pound, Tonne, Gram, and Ounce - and what story do they share? Follow the spoiler-safe hints one by one, then reveal the final connection and see how each clue fits together.
Stone Pound Tonne Gram - What connects Stone, Pound, Tonne, Gram?
LinkedIn Pinpoint #546 Answer:
Detailed breakdown continues just below - keep scrolling
Today’s LinkedIn Pinpoint puzzle starts with a familiar weight, Stone, which immediately made me think of units I might see at a British market. When Pound appeared, that theory seemed solid—I was already seeing a clear pattern of weight measurement. However, the board takes a sharp turn with Tonne, a massive industrial unit, forcing my initial idea to expand far beyond a simple, everyday context. The final clues make it clear that the connection isn’t about scale or geography, but about the fundamental category to which all these words belong.
| Clue Word | Example Phrase | Connection Explained |
|---|---|---|
| Stone | “Stone weight” | A 'stone' is a unit of mass commonly used in the UK to measure body weight, equivalent to 14 pounds. |
| Pound | “One pound equals 16 ounces” | A pound is a unit of mass commonly used in the United States and other countries, and it is defined as equivalent to 16 ounces. |
| Tonne | “One tonne equals 1,000 kilograms” | A tonne is a metric unit of mass commonly used to measure heavy objects, equivalent to 1,000 kilograms. |
| Gram | “Kilogram is 1000 grams” | Grams are a metric unit of mass, and a kilogram is defined as 1000 grams. |
| Ounce | “Fluid ounce” | A fluid ounce is a unit of volume that is commonly used in measuring liquids, which relates to mass when considering the density of the substance. |
Once the answer was revealed, everything made perfect sense. Here's how each clue connects:
Confirm the shared idea
Check how every clue maps back to "Units of mass" before you lock in an answer.
Lean on the walkthrough
Every clue in this set—Stone, Pound, Tonne, Gram, and Ounce—ultimately circles back to Units of mass. Stone sparks the pattern, Tonne reinforces it, and Ounce locks the shared idea in place once you view them through that lens.
Adjust your pace
Treat this as a moderate puzzle and pace your guesses accordingly.
Each clue ultimately points back to "Units of mass". The walkthrough below shows the specific links and supporting evidence.
Compare the board against the detailed breakdown, then apply the hints one clue at a time until the shared idea becomes obvious.
Explore the recent puzzles below or open the archive page in your language for more LinkedIn Pinpoint answers.
Swapping the order looks tempting (Stone, Pound, and Tonne), but keeping the connector alongside each clue produces natural phrases and consistent grammar across the board.