2000
There are lots of ways to do this, but here's one: Fill the 5 gallon jug to the top. Pour the water from the 5 gallon jug to the 3 gallon jug until the 3 gallon jug is full. What's left in the 5 gallon jug is 5 - 3 = 2 gallons. Dump what's in the 3 gallon jug. Put the 2 gallons from the larger jug into the smaller jug. Now fill the 5 gallon jug. You'll have 5 + 2 = 7 gallons, as needed.
10,000 dollars
If it's full, it will be holding 6 quarts.
No, a full jug of milk typically contains around 3.78 liters, not 0.50 liters.
buy a jug of wine from GE (GOOD PRICES!) and drink half of it ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The guy above is wrong, the half full jug of wine is now discontinued. It is impossible to obtain half Jug of wine by drinking wine anymore. ______________________________________________________________________
The answer will completely depend on the capacity of that particular jug.
fill the 3 litre jug, pour it into the 5 litre jug. refill the 3 litre jug, pour into the 5 litre jug until full you will have 1 litre left in the 3 litre jug.
To determine how much more water is needed to fill the jug to 1 liter, you first need to know the current volume of water in the jug. If the jug currently contains 750 ml of water, then you would need 250 ml more to reach 1 liter. This is calculated by subtracting the current volume from the desired volume (1000 ml - 750 ml = 250 ml).
Fill the seven litre jug. Empty into 9l jug. Refill 7 litre jug and empty into 9l jug. 7l jug now contains 5l, whilst 9l jug is full. Empty 9l jug. Pour contents of 7l jug into 9l jug. Refill 7l jug and empty into 9l jug. The remainder in the 7l jug will be 3 litres
Fill the 5 pint jug and poor it into the 3 pint jug until the 3 pint jug is full. Then there are two pints left in the 5 pint jug.
its simply 512/ 0.5 which equals 1024
milk in a full jug