To calculate the number of pennies needed to fill a 1.75 liter bottle, we first need to determine the volume of a single penny. A US penny has a volume of approximately 0.36 cubic centimeters. Next, we convert the volume of the bottle to cubic centimeters, which is 1750 milliliters or 1750 cubic centimeters. Finally, we divide the volume of the bottle by the volume of a penny to find out how many pennies will fit, which is approximately 4861 pennies.
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Well, honey, if we're talking basic math here, you can fill up 10 half-liter bottles from a five-liter container. It's simple division, darling. Just take that five liters and divide it by 0.5 liters per bottle, and voila! You've got your answer.
1500 ml1 liter = 1000 mililiters 1 mililiter = 0.001 liter
Five.
9 quatre litre's will fill a 2 and a quatre litre can
2
You could fill 4 cups with 220 ml from a 1 liter bottle as 1 liter is equal to 1000 ml.
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1000 ml
Oh, dude, I mean, technically speaking, you could fit around 8,000 pennies in a 1.75 liter bottle if you stack them perfectly. But like, who's really gonna sit there and count out all those pennies just to see if they fit? Maybe just toss in a handful and call it a day.
It means: How many times would you have to empty a full 1-liter bottle into this volume in order to fill it up ?
10 times
baby answer me
Lots Get a liter bottle, and count how many squirts you get.
There are approximately 18,750 pennies in a 5-gallon water bottle.
The answer will depend on whether you mean UK pennies and the Imperial gallon or US pennies (which are actually cents) and a measure that is a smaller gallon, or a penny from some other country and yet another arbitrary measure which is called a gallon!
There are 100 centiliters in a liter, inside a bottle or anywhere else.