A liter because a kilometer is for distance
398.6 Imperial gallons.
Yes, it would take 1,000 milliliters to fill up a liter.
# Fill the 5 liter bucket # Pour it into the 7 liter bucket # Fill the 5 liter bucket # Fill the 7 liter bucket from the 5 (2 liters go in leaving 3 liters in the 5 liter bucket) # Empty the 7 liter bucket # Pour the 3 liters from the 5 liter bucket into the 7 liter bucket # Fill the 5 liter bucket # Fill the 7 liter bucket from the 5 liter bucket (4 liters go in leaving 1 liter in the 5 liter bucket) # Empty the 7 liter bucket # Pour the 1 liter form the 5 liter bucket into the 7 liter bucket # fill the 5 liter bucket. You now have 5 liters in the 5 liter bucket and 1 liter in the 7 liter bucket; 6 liters in all. Pour the 5 liters into the 7 liter bucket if you want all 6 liters in one container.
Assuming an average bathtub has a volume of around 40-60 gallons, which is equivalent to 5,120-7,680 cups of water. A single cup can hold approximately 16 pennies, so the total number of pennies that can fill the average bathtub would be around 81,920-122,880 pennies. This calculation is based on the assumption that the pennies are stacked neatly and compactly without any gaps.
1 liter = 1,000 milliliters
45000 marbles would fill a bath tub. hope this helped
There are 5 ml in a teaspoon. An average bathtub is about 50 gallons which is 189 liters. A liter consist of 1000ml so it will be 189000 ml. So if you carry out some mathematics 189000/5 = 37800It will require 37800 teaspoons to fill an average bathtub of 50 gallons (189 liters).
Depends on the bathtub.
Personally neither as I would use gallons, but to help you think about it:If you had a bathtub which would be easier (and quicker) to measure it if you used your choice to fill the bathtub with water:a teaspoon (used for taking medicine) which holds 5 ml; ora jug which holds 1 l[The answer is litres (l), not millilitres (ml).]
No
It will fill a large bathtub.
Too many. It depends on the volume of the pool.
Only if the bathtub has a capacity of 45 gallons.
When you shower, the water goes down the drain and the drain may be clogged or slow, causing the water to back up and fill the bathtub.
To fill a 3.5-liter container, you would need 3500 milliliters of liquid. There are 1000 milliliters in 1 liter, so you would multiply 3.5 liters by 1000 to get the equivalent in milliliters.
36.74 (assuming average size sheep and bathtub)
That depends on the size of bathtub you have.