Well, honey, if the container is 7 tenths full, that means it has 1.75 liters in it. To fill it up to 2.5 liters, you would need 0.75 liters more. So, the decimal fraction of 1 liter required to fill it would be 0.75. Hope that clears things up for you, darling!
Here's how to proceed:Fill container B with 3 liters.Pour the 3 liters from container B into container A.Fill container B again with 3 liters.Carefully pour from container B into container A, until container A is full.Container A already had 3 liters, so it only takes 2 more liters to fill it to 5 liters, leaving 1 liter remaining in container B.
A rectangular container with a square base of 2.4 meters on each sideand height of 0.5 meters has capacity of2.4 x 2.4 x 0.5 = 2.88 cubic meters = 2,880 liters.
1 hectoliter = 100 liters; 50 hectoliter = 5000 liters 1 kiloliter = 1,000 liters; 10 kiloliters = 10,000 liters
A dumpster.
1 liter = 1000 mL 100 liters = 100000 mL Hence fraction is 200/100000 = 2/1000 = 1/500
Here's how to proceed:Fill container B with 3 liters.Pour the 3 liters from container B into container A.Fill container B again with 3 liters.Carefully pour from container B into container A, until container A is full.Container A already had 3 liters, so it only takes 2 more liters to fill it to 5 liters, leaving 1 liter remaining in container B.
To find the volume of a liquid in liters, you can use a measuring container marked in liters. Simply pour the liquid into the container and read the volume indicated on the container in liters.
A cube 46.4 meters or 152 feet on a side is required to hold 100 million liters of water.
you will need a gallon container.
3 liters From 8021057561
1.3
there are 2 liters in that container
A U.S. 6-quart container will hold approximately 5.68 liters.
Pour from the 7 liter container into the 5 liter container until their levels are equal. Both containers will then have 6 liters in them.
A rectangular container with a square base of 2.4 meters on each sideand height of 0.5 meters has capacity of2.4 x 2.4 x 0.5 = 2.88 cubic meters = 2,880 liters.
A 520 centimeters container to the third power can hold up to 0.525 liters.
A 5 gallon container will hold approximately 18.9 liters of gas.