About 319.2 fluid ounces.
Assuming you meant to say fluid ounces: 40.58 fluid ounces.
To convert cubic inches to ounces, since 1 cubic inch is equal to 0.5541 fluid ounces, you would multiply the volume in cubic inches by this conversion factor. Therefore, 53.9511 cubic inches is approximately equal to 29.89 fluid ounces.
a fluid ounce is measure of volume while a pound is a measure of weight, so you need to know the density of the fluid before you can determine this. If the fluid is water, its density is 0.036 pounds per cubic inch and 1fluid ounces is 1.0805 cubic inches. 32 fluid ounces is 1.805 x 32 = 57.75 cubic inches . At 0.036 pounds per cubic inch, it weighs.036x 57.75 = 2.08 pounds. If this were oil and not water, weight would be different. Don't confuse fluid ounce with ounce weight
I cup = 8 US fluid ounces. 3/4 cup = 6 fluid ounces 22 ounce container is almost equal to 24 fluid ounces, so a bit more than 1/4 of your container would be roughly equal to 6 fluid ounces.
You would probably use milliliters(mL) or fluid ounces (oz).
Well, honey, a fluid ounce is about 29.5735 cubic centimeters, so if you do the math, 40 fluid ounces would be around 1182.94 cubic centimeters. But who's counting? Just pour yourself a drink and enjoy, darling.
Rephrasing the question to: How much is 6 cl (Centiliters) in fluid Ounces. 6 cl is 0.06 Liters or 60cc (Cubic Centimeters) or 2.03 US Fluid Ounces. As this is a Cooking Question, the practical answer would be Two Ounces!
Only 16.9 of the 64 fluid ounces would fit in 16.9 fluid ounces.
if i had to give a good answer i would say it is both because weight itself is a meausurement but it is for sure weight. Answer Fluid ounces is a measurement of volume. The weight (mass) depends on what you are measuring. 16 fluid ounces of syrup being much heavier than 16 fluid ounces of water.
A 3 inch diameter by 3 inch high container is 21.195 cubic inches. There is 1.805 cu in per ounce, so that would be 21.195/1.805 = 11.74 ounces
The answer will depend on the density of the fluid.
There are many units: Liters, cubic centimeters, gallons, teaspoons, tablespoons, fluid ounces, cubic inches, quarts, cups, cubic meters, cubic kilometers, barrels, and many more obscure units.