about 6.45 because you don't want to have a little bit and then she drink the little bit down quickly
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The idea is to divide the mass by the volume. I assume the half liter is what fits inside the bottle; in theory, the actual volume of the bottle plus the contents should be slightly more. Also, in theory you'll have to add a small amount of mass for the air inside. If the bottle is filled with air, then you'll actually get the average density of the bottle plus the air.
one liter is always one liter it doesn't matter if it is in a water bottle or or a bucket
The answer depends on how big the bottle is and what material it is made of.
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.
Capacity is the space inside something (that is hollow). Volume is the space something occupies. The capacity of a bottle is the amount of space inside the bottle, whereas the volume of the bottle is the space that the bottle occupies. The difference between the two is the volume of the material from which the bottle is made.