No. The 20 ounce bottle is just a tiny bit short of 0.6 liters.
2 kilograms of fresh water (assuming water density is 1 gm/cc)The mass of 1 liter of pure water at standard temperature and pressure is 1 kilogram.Under those same conditions, 2 kg of that same substance will fill 2.0 liters.
An ounce is a unit of weight. A fluid once is a unit of volume, equal to the volume of one ounce of water. If you are measuring water, 1 ounce = 1 fluid ounce. If not, it won't.
No. A fluid ounce is a measure of volume, related to liquids and fluids. An ounce is a unit of weight or mass. A glass of water can have both - the glass and water together have a particular weight or mass but the water inside the glass has volume and is measured in fluid ounces.
There are a bit less than 3 12-ounce bottles in a liter. So you'd multiply by 5 to get 15 and take off 10 percent. That's 13.5 beers in five liters, which is the same as buying a 12-pack and getting a free pint.
4 glasses of water.
A single two liter bottle of soda is equal to about 72 fluid ounces. This means that compared to 60 fluid ounces for the same price, the two-liter is a better deal.
talk the another same bottle and pour into it. and pour it in a same level.
"litre" is the British way of writing "liter". The two mean exactly the same thing and are pronounced the same but spelled differently. There are 33.8 ounces in a liter. A liter is a measure of volume, like a gallon, a quart, a pint, or an ounce. A 2-liter bottle of soda contains two liters, or 67.6 ounces of soda.
Yes; an ounce is an ounce is an ounce ...
No, a litre is more than a fifth.
#s on plastic bottle such as 13.21B 01 006 4 also 13:14HJ01064 on same bottle?
They are exactly the same weight - you said it, an ounce.
They are the same volume and very close to the same weight.
No. Oil is less dense than water, so 1 liter of oil will weigh less than 1 liter of water.
For a 2 liter bottle it is $1.88 and it is the same price in their money as well.
The 2 liter bottle has the same worth regardless of what it is filled with, probable 1/10th of a cent or less.
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