A dose unit of measure is likely to be a measured portion of a medicine.
Well that would depend on the size of the plastic bottle. If the bottle is large use litters or "L" for short. If the bottle is small use milliliters or "ml" for short.
fluid ounce
cm
Yes, milliliters (ml) are a unit of measurement used to quantify the volume of liquid, including water, in a bottle. To determine the capacity of a bottle, you can fill it with water and measure the volume in milliliters. The total volume of water the bottle can hold is its capacity, expressed in ml.
gallons
milliliters
No, a bottle is not a standardized unit of measure. It typically refers to a container for holding liquids with various capacities depending on the type of bottle.
The unit is millilitre (mL).
A dose unit of measure is likely to be a measured portion of a medicine.
Either fluid ounces (oz.) or milliliters (ml.)
I would use milliliters to measure a bottle of cough syrup, as it is a more precise unit for smaller quantities typically found in medicine. Cough syrup bottles often contain volumes ranging from 100 mL to 500 mL, making milliliters more practical for dosing and measurement. Liters would be too large for such small volumes.
Well that would depend on the size of the plastic bottle. If the bottle is large use litters or "L" for short. If the bottle is small use milliliters or "ml" for short.
feet
I have seen units/bt where bt stands for bottle
fluid ounce
depends how big. sometimes mL, sometimes L, and if it gets that big, Tons.