Crumpled or wadded paper
At least 135 millilitres. If it was full of sand then its capacity is 135 ml but there is nothing in the question to indicate that it was filled with the sand.
The amount a container holds is its capacity, measured in liters, gallons, or cubic meters.
A container with a volume of at least 24.06 cubic feet.
135mL equates to 135 cubic centimeters (cc) or0.135 cubic decimeters.
A container one metre high, one metre long, and one metre wide holds one cubic metre of solids.
A container with a volume of 14.44 cubic feet will hold 108 gallons of water.
You are asking for volume which is found by simply multiplying the three numbers together: 30*86*24=61920 cubic inches or, converted to cubic feet: 35.8333 cubic feet
That's going to depend on the shape of the container, especially on how much 'real estate' the base of the container covers. For discussion, imagine that the container is a square fish tank, and the four walls go straight up from the four sides of the square base. -- If the base of the tank covers 64 square feet and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 1 foot deep. -- If the base of the tank covers 1 acre and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 0.0176 inch deep. -- If the base of the tank covers 1 square inch and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 9,216 feet (1.745 mile) deep.
The container with the largest volume holds the most water.
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you will need a gallon container.
A container holds volume.