The amount held in a container is the volume.
The amount a container can hold is called the volume, measured in litres if you're using the metric system(SI.) The answer is capacity or the volume of the container and it depends on how big the container is!
It means One (1) Twenty foot, full container load for a minimum order. What is 1x20? -- One twenty foot container FCL -- Full Container Load
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.
The amount or volume a container can hold.
Am 3 quart container
24,685.7 gallons.
About 319.2 fluid ounces.
1/3
A container with dimensions 3 in x 3 in x 1.5 in can hold a volume of 13.5 cubic inches. Since 1 cubic inch is equal to approximately 0.554 fluid ounces, the container can hold around 7.5 fluid ounces.
One possible answer is Yes. This is logically correct because it does hold "more than or less than" 5 ml of fluid since it does not hold that amount!The more prosaic answer is more than.
Capacity of the container = (pi) x (radius of the round end)2 x (height of the cylinder). That's the capacity of the container. If the volume of the fluid in it is really what you want, then you can use the same formula, but instead of the full height of the container, use only the height of the fluid column, i.e. what we professionals would technically refer to as the "depth".
It is usually called the capacity. It is basically the same thing as the volume.
A 5-gallon container can hold 640 fluid ounces of water.
You can check the anti-freeze level, in a Arctic Cat 400 ATV, by looking at the amount of fluid in the overflow container. The overflow container should be approximately half full.
Is called the capacity or the volume of the container. It is usually measured in cubic centimetres or in litres. There are formulae for straightforward shapes but for most irregular shapes the only way to find the capacity is empirically - fill it with a fluid and then measure the volume of the fluid.
All of those choices are fine. They each are measures of liquid volume.