1500 ml1 liter = 1000 mililiters 1 mililiter = 0.001 liter
2
600 litres / (1 litre/bottle) = 600 bottles
.002 mL
If you and the bottle are anywhere near the Earth's surface, AND there's no other force working against you, AND the bottle itself weighs zero and you only have to lift the water, then you need to lift it with any force greater than roughly 19.6 newtons.
There are 1000 milliliters in one liter, so 0.3 liters is equal to 300 milliliters.
A liter of water weighs approximately 2.2 pounds. So a 1.00 liter bottle of drinking water would weigh about 2.2 pounds.
There are 500 milliliters of water in a 0.5 liter Dasani water bottle.
A 2 litre bottle of water contain 2 007,38.10e23 atoms.
1600
1500 ml1 liter = 1000 mililiters 1 mililiter = 0.001 liter
Lots Get a liter bottle, and count how many squirts you get.
2
1,500 millilitres = 1.5 litres
250ml
Depends on the size of the water bottle. There is somewhere between 33 and 35 ounces to a liter, depending on if you're using US or Imperial fluid ounces. A typical disposable water bottle is approx. 18 ounces (the Gatorade bottle I have is 20 ounces), so it would be just barely under two water bottles - about 1.9 water bottles to a liter.
There are 100 centiliters in a liter, inside a bottle or anywhere else.