1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter
There are 2 pints in 1 quart, so you can fit 4 pints into 2 quarts.
On average, 199 five pence coins can fit in a liter bottle.
The volume of a quarter coin is 808.53 mm cubed (assuming it's not worn thin). In theory you could fit 1000 000 /808.53 = 1236.81 quarters in a litre. However, that assumes you can fill all the space and you can't do that because of the fixed cylindrical shape of the quarters. You would have to look at how many coins would fit in your particular shape.
Centimetres are a measure of distance while a litre is a measure of capacity; the two cannot be converted to each other. If they could, then it would be possible to figure out how many centimeters of gas your car holds, and how many liters you walked to the store yesterday.
About 1.75 pints in a liter
1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter
1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter
No. 1 liter ~= 1 3/4 pints. Therefore 2 pints will not fit in a liter bottle.
1 liter = 2.113 3764189 pint [liquid] -or- 1 liter = 1.8161659565 pint [dry]
Please try to write clearly understandable questions -
Approximately 208 20-cent coins would fit in a liter, based on the volume of a standard 20-cent coin and the volume of a liter.
80
NONE, because that would be cruel to do.
Centimeters can't be converted to pints. Centimeters measure length, while pints measure volume.
1 liter = 1,000 milliliters 20 milliliters can fit into the liter 50 times, but the liter cannot fit into the 20 milliliters even one time. If you're allowed to cut up the liter into pieces, then 1/50 of it can fit into the 20 milliliters one time. That would leave 980 milliliters hanging out.
156