2 L = 1.76 quarts, so 2 quarts will more than fill it.
To calculate the number of quarters of milk needed to fill a 2-litre jug, we need to know the volume of 1 quarter. Assuming the standard volume of a quarter of milk is 1 liter, we can then determine that we would need 2 quarters of milk to fill a 2-liter jug.
2 and 1 quarter litre is 2.25 litres. 1 litre = 1000 millilitres so 2.25 litres = 2250 millilitres.
The contents of 7 jugs.
343 litres.
There are 1000 ml in one l. 3.25 x 1000 is 3,250.
12
About 200 litres to fill a bath.
8 quarter litres of water is same as 2 litres of water.
There are 250ml in 1 quarter of a litre.
2 litres = 2,000 millilitres, so 1,000 millilitres (1 litre) are needed to fill the half-full jug.
2 and 1 quarter litre is 2.25 litres. 1 litre = 1000 millilitres so 2.25 litres = 2250 millilitres.
2500 ml = 2.5 litres
To solve this, we will figure out how many grams there are per litre. To do this, we will divide the overall amount of litres 350 grams goes into by 350, so we are dividing 350 by 10,000. This answer is 0.035. We will then multiply 0.035 (how many grams needed for one litre) by 3300, to get how many are needed for that many litres, which gives us 115.5 grams. 115.5 grams are needed for 3300 litres if 250 grams are needed for 10,000 litres.
That is 45.359 litres.
1.5 litres = 1,500 ml = 100 ml poured out 15 times
There are 1,000 millilitres in a litre. Thus to convert from litres to millilitres you have to multiply by 1,000. In this case we have 2/4 litres. Multiply this by 1,000 and you get 2,000/4 millilitres. This calculates to 500. Thus there are 500 millilitres in 2 quarter litres.
9 quatre litre's will fill a 2 and a quatre litre can
43 litres