Fill the 7 L.
Pour from the 7 L into the 3 L and empty the 3 L.
Pour from the 7 L into the 3 L again and empty the 3 L again.
Pour from the 7 L into the 3 L again and leave it.
Fill the 7 L again.
Use it to top up the 3 L.
What you have left in the 7 L is 5 L.
uu
Well, let's paint a happy little picture here. In a 3 liter container, you can fit 24 of those 125ml cans. Just imagine all the beautiful colors and possibilities that could fill those cans, happy little accidents and all. Just remember, there are no mistakes, only happy little accidents.
About 3.33 cans of soda, assuming each can holds 12 ounces, are needed to make up 1 liter.
Fill the 4 liter with water and empty into the 3 liter, leaving one liter in the 4 liter receptacle. Dump the 3 liter water, and pour the remaining one liter from the 4 liter into the 3 liter. Fill the four liter and dump into 3 liter until full. You now have added two liters to the 3 liter receptacle and 2 liters remain in the 4 liter receptacle.
* Fill 4 liter jug. * Empty the 4 liter jug into the 5 liter jug. * Again fill 4 liter jug. * Fill up the 5 liter jug with the 4 liter jug. * There are now 3 liters in the 4 liter jug.
5 liters is 5000 mL. 5000/250 = 20 bottles.
Two bowls of 3 liter Then fill 4 liter bowl and pour into 3 liter bowl - which leaves 1 liter in 4 liter bowl Repeat So 3+3+1+1 = 8 or simply two bowls of 4 liter
Well, honey, technically, there are about 33.814 ounces in a liter. So if you do the math, one liter is roughly equivalent to 2.8 12oz cans. But hey, who's counting when you've got a cold drink in hand?
Liter is a metric measure 3 They used to measure the size of an engin in cubic inches For example Ford has a 5.0 liter that is the 302 cubic inch motor Try and google a liter to cubic inch calculator and see what happens JIM
-4
Pour 1L from the 5L can into the 2L can. Do nothing to the 3L can.Start:5L can = 5L3L can = 3L2L can = 0LTOTAL = 8LEnd:5L can = 4L3L can = 3L2L can = 1L [3L can + 2L can = 4L]TOTAL = 8L
A litre is a measure of volume, or itself a cubic measure. A cubic litre is, therefore, a measure of "volume" in 9-dimensional hyperspace! A hectlitre, meanwhile, is an ordinary 3-d measure of volume and no number of 3-d volumes will make up a 9-d hyper volume.