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.
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one liter is always one liter it doesn't matter if it is in a water bottle or or a bucket
A liter is a unit of volume in the metric system, equivalent to 1,000 cubic centimeters. An example of a liter would be a standard bottle of water, which typically contains 1 liter of liquid. Another example could be a liter of milk or a liter of gasoline, as these are commonly sold and measured in liters.
There are 1,500 milliliters in a 1.5 liter bottle of water. This conversion is based on the fact that 1 liter is equal to 1,000 milliliters. Therefore, to convert 1.5 liters to milliliters, you would multiply 1.5 by 1,000, resulting in 1,500 milliliters.
Five.
As defined by the metric prefix milli, meaning 10^-3, 1000 mL of water are contained in a L bottle of water. For that matter, 1000 ml of anything are contained in a L bottle of anything.