Wiki User
∙ 16y agoCockleshells dont grow and dont need water. But in a maths question they do grow, therefore someone else needs to answer the question 1. Fill the 7 liter jug 2. Pour 7 litres into 10 liter jug 3. Repeat steps 1 and 2. This leaves 4 liters in the 7 liter jug 4. Pour the 4 liters on the cockleshells 5. Repeat steps 1 through 4
Wiki User
∙ 16y agoYes, Mary can water her plants. She can fill the 7-liter jug, pour it into the pond, then fill the 7-liter jug again and top up the pond with 1 liter from the 10-liter jug. This will give her exactly 8 liters of water to water her plants.
Feet and liters are units of measurement for different quantities (distance and volume, respectively) so there is no direct conversion between the two. One cannot convert 9 feet into liters.
Converting pounds to liters is not straightforward as they are units of weight and volume respectively, and the conversion depends on the density of the substance. To convert pounds to liters, you would need to know the density of the substance in question. Once you have the density, you can use the formula: volume (liters) = weight (pounds) / density.
One US liquid gallon is defined as exactly 3.785411784 liters. Therefore to convert liters to gallons, value in liters has to be divided by conversion factor which is 3.785411784: 30 liters = 30 / 3.785411784 = 7.925 US liquid gallons
Kilograms and liters are units of measurement for different properties - mass and volume, respectively. The conversion between the two depends on the density of the substance in question. For water, which has a density of 1 kg/L, 5 kilograms would be equivalent to 5 liters.
There are approximately 59.15 fluid ounces in 2 liters. To find out how many times 16.9 fluid ounces goes into 2 liters, divide 59.15 by 16.9. It will go into 2 liters approximately 3.5 times.
Exactly 30,000 liters.
Exactly 0.4
198 liters: about 6.992 cubic feet.65 liters: about 2.295 cubic feet.
The metric units for volume for liquids and solids are liters and liters/meters-cubed, respectively.
* For every liter, there are exactly 1000000000 nanoliters. * For every nanoliter, there are 1.0X10-9 liters
exactly correct
The amount of water used to water a garden depends on the size of the garden, the type of plants, and the frequency of watering. On average, a garden may use 2-3 liters of water per square foot each time it is watered.
That is exactly 7.416 litres.
As a percentage it is exactly 10 percent.
They are exactly the same amount.
Converting pounds to liters is not straightforward as they are units of weight and volume respectively, and the conversion depends on the density of the substance. To convert pounds to liters, you would need to know the density of the substance in question. Once you have the density, you can use the formula: volume (liters) = weight (pounds) / density.
1 barrel of crude oil equals exactly 158.987 Liters.