The answer depends on how large the glass is: there is no standard size.
10Kilo
50kg
it is the same weigh.
A half inch thick tempered glass will weigh 6.75 lb/ft2. With that much thickness, it can support much of the weight of possibly a small child or small animal.
They weigh the same
*Weigh the empty glass ( For Accurate Result - Dry the Glass in a Drier to remove moisture and then weigh) * Fill it with water and Weigh * get the Exact weight of the water ( whatever level the glass may be filled) *Use relationship b/w Voulme,Mass and Density of Water @ Temperature to find out the Volume of the water U filled up! Volume = Density * Mass will give u exactly what u want !
yes because when you dissolve sugar into water, it doesn't dissapear. You may not be able to see it but the sugar is still in the water, therefore making it heavier because there are two masses there (sugar and water)
A balance can be used. Water has a specific gravity of 1, meaning that 1000 ml of water weighs 1000 grams. Weigh the glass with the water in it and note the value (A). Pour away the water. Weigh the glass and note the value (B). Subtract B from A, resulting in the weight of water, Then convert the weight of water to volume: each gram of water = 1 milliliter of water. A graduated cylinder.
Depends on the material of that fiber glass weigh.
Millilitres, ml, is a unit of volume rather than weight. The weight (strictly the mass) of a glass of water would be measured in grams. To weigh a glass of water, you'd just put it on a simple top pan balance. To measure the volume, you'd transfer the water to a vessel with a calibrated scale on the side, eg a measuring cylinder.
No, sugar is heavier than salt.
80 % yeah get that right loser
Measure the mass of the hot water, then add sugar. Dissolve the sugar in the water, then weigh it again. A much faster way to see if there is in fact sugar in hot water is tasted it (if it is not too hot).
if you are talking about the same glass that had water in it and THEN froze, then my friend the weight is the same. Ofcourse this is correct only if while freezing, no water spilled out of the glass (because ice takes up more space than water.
its glass. are you stupid?
doesn't it dissolve into the water, so it would probably weigh the same
whats sugar beets weigh