No I believe not.
No, one is a measure of weight, and the other volume. The two are not comparable. (which is not to say that a substance that had a volume of 4 oz might not also weigh 4 oz)
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One fluid ounce of water weighs approximately 1.04 ounces in solid weight. However, this can vary slightly depending on the density of the liquid in question.
I did this experiment before. The jar said 18oz of jam on the label, which is NOT equal to 18 fl oz of water. It was closer to 13 fl oz when I put water in the jar.
In general a fluid ounce of water will be an ounce of weight. A pint of water is 16 ounces which would be one pound.
One. This is not exactly accurate. Fluid ounces are a measure of volume, where as ounce is a measure of weight. While many chefs believe one can interchange the two, that is not true, for one fluid ounce of flour will weigh much less than one fluid ounce of milk.
One cc (cubic centimeter) of water weighs about 1 gram. However, the weight of 1 cc of fluid can vary depending on the type of fluid, as different liquids have different densities.
One liter of Ringer's lactate IV fluid weighs approximately 2.2 pounds.
a fluid ounce is measure of volume while a pound is a measure of weight, so you need to know the density of the fluid before you can determine this. If the fluid is water, its density is 0.036 pounds per cubic inch and 1fluid ounces is 1.0805 cubic inches. 32 fluid ounces is 1.805 x 32 = 57.75 cubic inches . At 0.036 pounds per cubic inch, it weighs.036x 57.75 = 2.08 pounds. If this were oil and not water, weight would be different. Don't confuse fluid ounce with ounce weight