Take the 5 litres or liquid solid or gas and put it into the 5 litre container.
No, compost is bulky and will have air-spaces. So less compost can be packed into the litre container. Water is a liquid and will fill the container completely, and will be heavier.
lots. but 100mm of rain will fill any regular shaped (cylindrical) container 100mm. so a 200mmx100mm container in 100mm rain will collect 2 litres (100x100x200=2000000mm³=2l)
Fill 5 lb containerFill 3 lb container from 5lb, leaving 2 lb in 5 lb containerEmpty 3 lb containerPour contents (2 lb) of 5 lb container into 3 lb containerFill 5 lb containerTop up 3 lb container (with 1lb) from 5 lb container to fill 3 lb container.Leavers 4lb in 5 lb container.
The theoretical answer will depend on the shape of the tank; information which you have chosen not to share. The only alternative is to fill the tank and then empty it using a measured container. If, for example, a k litre container can be filled from the tank n times, then the volume of the tank is k*n litres.
You would need 5 bottles of 500 ml each to fill a 2.5-liter container.
Fill the 5 litre container and empty it into the 9 litre one. Fill the 5 litre (again) and empty 4 litres into the 9 litre container. Now - empty the remaining litre into the 6 litre container. Finally re-fill the 5 litre container and empty into the 6 litre one - and you're done.
Several ways to achieve this - here is one solution. Fill the 5 litre container and pour it all into the 9 litre container. Fill the 5 litre container and pour it into the 9 litre container until the latter is full - leaving 1 litre in the 5 litre container. Empty the 9 litre container. Fill the 3 litre container and empty into 9 litre container. Repeat. There are now 6 litres in the 9 litre container. Pour the 1 litre from the 5 litre container into the 9 litre container which now contains 7 litres.
First fill 5 litre and pour it into 7 Litre. Then again fill 5 litre and pour to 7 litre. Now 3 litres are left in 5 litre container. Empty 7 litre and pour 3 litre in it. Again fill 5 litre and pour in 7 litre. Now 7 litre is full and 1 liter left in 5 liter container. Empty 7 litre and pour 1 litre which is left in 5 litre container. Now 1 litre is already in 7 litre container, now fill 5 litre and pour into 7 litre container. now it is 6 litre in 7 litre container. DONE!
9 quatre litre's will fill a 2 and a quatre litre can
Well, isn't that a happy little question! You see, a liter is equal to 1000 milliliters, and if you have 200ml bottles, you would need 5 of them to fill up a 1 liter jug. Just imagine the lovely sight of those bottles all lined up, creating a beautiful harmony of volume.
Yes, the word 'bottles' is both a noun (bottle, bottles) and a verb (bottle, bottles, bottling, bottled).The noun 'bottles' is the plural form of the singular noun 'bottle', a word for a type of container; a word for a thing.The verb 'bottles' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to bottle; meaning to fill such a container with liquid.
use 2 litre jug and fill half
To convert gallons to milliliters, we know that 1 gallon is equal to 3,785.41 ml. Therefore, to find out how many 750 ml bottles are needed to fill a gallon, we divide 3,785.41 ml by 750 ml, which equals approximately 5.05 bottles. So, it would take about 5 bottles of 750 ml each to fill a gallon.
Take the 5 litres or liquid solid or gas and put it into the 5 litre container.
Yes... First fill the 8 litre jug completely from the tap and then pour the contents into the 15 litre jug. Next fill the 8 litre jug completely from the tap and pour the contents into the 15 litre jug until it is full and you will be left with exactly 1 litre of water in the 8 litre jug.
No, compost is bulky and will have air-spaces. So less compost can be packed into the litre container. Water is a liquid and will fill the container completely, and will be heavier.