millilitre
Due to the sugar cube being soluble, you should use a solution which does not allow sugar to dissolve e.g. kerosene. Just follow the usual way to measure solids with a measuring cylinder and you will have the volume of the sugar cube
Use measuring cups. More detail: Depending on the amount needed, you will use either a standard measuring teaspoon (tsp), tablespoon (tbs), or standard measuring cups.
it is use for measuring food
If you are measuring by weight, yes. If you are measuring by volume (i.e "cups"), not necessarily, since caster sugar has smaller grains and hence will "fit together" in the cup in a more compact way than granulated sugar will. This means that a cup of caster sugar will contain slightly more than a cup of granulated sugar will.
It depends on the experiment. In one particular experiment, using the technique of measuring volume as a means of counting will work. Think of measuring volume; a tablespoon of sugar or salt. When measuring the volume of it, we are measuring how much space it takes up. This can also be a means of counting because once the molar mass of each element is accounted for, the number of moles (counting!) can be calculated.
by measuring it. because if you test the structure of a sugar by measuring you will know what is the structure of the sugar... answer by: heralyn laquezta :)
you use a measuring cup to measure stuff. mostly cooking. Answer: you can use a dry measuring cup, or a liquid measuring cup. you use liquids such as water or veggie oil. for dry measuring cups, you put in dry stuff, such as baking flour or sugar. all you have to do is put the substance in and read the number. talk about easy and simple to use!!!
that's just like asking how many grains of sand are on a beach...... what you could do is... measure the size of a grain of sugar - width, length, height and times these together to find its volume. then empty a bag of sugar and fill it with water, until where the sugar reaches when filled. pour the water into a measuring jug - you now have the volume of sugar that the bag takes in cm3. the grains of sugar will have a few air spaces between them so take a rough guess at this amount - maybe 1-2cm3 now minus this from the volume of the bag. divide the volume of the bag by the volume of one grain of sugar. this will be an approximate figure of how many grains there are.
flour, powered sugar, granulated sugar........this is for dry measuring cups.
flour, powered sugar, granulated sugar........this is for dry measuring cups.
Because grams are measuring mass and cups measure volume, the ratio will change based on what you are measuring. However, 1 cup of granulated sugar equals 200 grams. So 115 grams of sugar would be 0.58 cups of sugar.
it is commonly known as the table sugar.