1 cc is equal to 1 mL which is equal to one gram of pure water, so 29.5735297 cc's or 30 cc's or 30 mL equals ones one ounce
A liquid (or fluid) ounce is a measure of volume. A gram is a measure of mass. Therefore, the number of grams per fluid ounce of a liquid depends on what the liquid is, specifically on what its density is.
one quarter ounce of yeast or .25 ounce equals 1.5 teaspoons or 1 1/2 tsps.
1 [ one ] oz equals 29.5735296875 ml.
"Drop" is not a standardized measurement, and will vary from dropper to dropper (and potentially from liquid to liquid). Your best bet is to take your dropper, put an ounce of liquid in it, and calibrate it by counting the drops.
A gram of liquid tea is much less than an ounce, about 1/29th of an ounce. There are 29.57 milliliters in an ounce, and 1 ml of water weighs about 1 gram.
1/8 of a cup is an ounce.
One ounce of any liquid is 1/8 cup, or two Tablespoons. The type of liquid does not change the measurement.
59.14 ml 1 ounce = 29.57 ml 1 ml = 0.03 ounce
1 ounce of liquid equals approximately 29.57 cc.
A liquid (or fluid) ounce is a measure of volume. A gram is a measure of mass. Therefore, the number of grams per fluid ounce of a liquid depends on what the liquid is, specifically on what its density is.
one quarter ounce of yeast or .25 ounce equals 1.5 teaspoons or 1 1/2 tsps.
This is impossible to answer because gallons is a measurement of liquid and a yard is a measurement of distance.
zero; a liter is a measurement of liquid
Well, it depends what country you are inIf you are in the USA then you can not do this conversion because a dry ounce is a measurement of weight (Mass) and a Millilitre is a measurement of volume (displaced space) However if you are in the UK then you can because they have a measurement conversion 1 ounce = 28.41 ml in the UK british measurement system so divide to get your answer then 1ml is 0.035199 of an ounce
1 [ one ] oz equals 29.5735296875 ml.
50.72 ounce [US, liquid] http://www.onlineconversion.com/volume.htm
"Drop" is not a standardized measurement, and will vary from dropper to dropper (and potentially from liquid to liquid). Your best bet is to take your dropper, put an ounce of liquid in it, and calibrate it by counting the drops.