Yes, that is correct
2 cups is bigger than 8 fluid ounces. There are 8 ounces in a cup, so 2 cups is the same as 16 fluid ounces.
No. Each pint is 16 fluid ounces. Two of them make 32 fluid ounces (one quart).
Neither is bigger, They are identical volumes.
No. 15 cups = 120 fluid ounces1 cup = 8 fluid ounces80 fluid ounces = 10 cups
A cup is 8 fluid ounces. 5 fluid ounces would be 5/8ths of a cup.
To subtract these two quantities, we need to first make sure that the units are the same. 9 c 5 fl oz is equal to 9 cups plus 5 fluid ounces, and 4 c 7 fl oz is equal to 4 cups plus 7 fluid ounces. To subtract them, we need to subtract the cups and the fluid ounces separately. For the cups: 9 cups - 4 cups = 5 cups For the fluid ounces: 5 fluid ounces - 7 fluid ounces = -2 fluid ounces Since we have a negative result for the fluid ounces, this means that we have "borrowed" a cup from the cups column, and we now have: 5 cups - 1 cup = 4 cups So the final answer is 4 c 14 fl oz.
They are the same amount
24 ounces of liquid is the same measurement as 3 liquid cups
You may multiply by 0.25, or divide by 4. The result is the same- cups to quarts.
(16 ounces) / (8 ounces per cup) = 2 cupsRegardless of what's in it.Even if it's empty.
1 US fluid ounce --------------------------1/8 US cup370----------------------------------------------xx = 370 x o,125 = 46,25 cups47 cups is a little more than 370 fluid ounces.
Usually 5 cups is 40 fluid ounces. However, that needs to be qualified. A British Imperial small cup = 227ml = 1/4 fifth = 1/2 pound water = 8 imperial fluid ounces = .96 US cups = 0.8 Imperial half pint cups = 0.908 metric equivalent cups (250 ml). A US cup = 1.043 imperial small cups or 0.835 imperial large cups = 8 fl.oz. US = 8.344 imperial ounces = 236.8 ml = 0.9472 metric equiv.. cups An imperial half pint cup = 1.25 small cups = 10 fluid ounces Imp. = 1.199 US cups = 283.7 ml = 1.135 metric equiv. cups So with all these measurement possibilities, and their confusions, 5 imperial 1/2 pint cups(the largest cup) can be as much as 50 fluid ounces imperial (the smallest fluid ounce)or 5 imperial small cups(the smallest cup) can be as few as 38.34 fluid ounces US measure (the largest fluid ounce). ***To further confuse this, there are other measures which have been used over the years, and some presently, such as a teacupful (6 fl.oz.), a wineglassful (3 fl.oz.), a mugful or tankardful (10-12 fluid ounces) and the like.