no---unless taxes are paid for each refill for the life of the bottle
first we have to take the weight of the empty bottle list. then to take the weight of the bottle with remaining liquor. take the variance in gms and convert it into litres.
But it in the other bottle. In general, you want to minimize exposure of liquor to air.
The bartender is required to retain empty liquor bottles, and then each empty liquor bottle is replaced with a full one at the beginning of the next shift. The empty bottles are then either broken or disposed of as local beverage law requires.
Where is the bottle? There are droplets so it is not empty. An empty bottle is empty of liquid conent but it will have air in it.
Where is the bottle? There are droplets so it is not empty. An empty bottle is empty of liquid conent but it will have air in it.
By definition, an empty bottle has nothing inside.
Put the empty bottle near a fire.
an empty water bottle
Nothing. The bottle is now truly empty.
An empty bottle has less mass than a full bottle. This means that the empty bottle has less force to overcome when lifted which corresponds to less work to lift it.
Empty and wet, yes. Empty and dry, no.
it would depend on the size of the bottle