Yes; an ounce is an ounce is an ounce ...
They are exactly the same weight - you said it, an ounce.
An ounce is an ounce.
They are the same volume and very close to the same weight.
An ounce is a unit of weight. A fluid once is a unit of volume, equal to the volume of one ounce of water. If you are measuring water, 1 ounce = 1 fluid ounce. If not, it won't.
lead and water will occupy the same volume. however the Density of lead is 207.2 g/L (grams per liter) and the Density of H2O is only 18.02 g/L so if you had the same volume of lead and water the lead would be heavier. But if you had the same Weight of both water and lead the water would have a larger volume.
No. A fluid ounce is a measure of volume, related to liquids and fluids. An ounce is a unit of weight or mass. A glass of water can have both - the glass and water together have a particular weight or mass but the water inside the glass has volume and is measured in fluid ounces.
Lead (11,34 g.cm^-3) has a greater density than water (1 g.cm^-3) so for the same volume of water and lead, lead will be heavier. The "-3" should be written as an exponent but it won't allow me
1 fluid ounce of water weighs 1 ounce; so they are the same weight if you are talking about water. However, if you are measuring a liquid that has a density greater than that of water, then 1 fluid ounce of that liquid would weigh more than 1 ounce.
No. The 20 ounce bottle is just a tiny bit short of 0.6 liters.
A liquid ounce such as water is 2 tablespoons same with butter but dry weight varies such as flour or sugar etc
The same as above the water. Lead is a dense metal and has no bouyancy at all.
The volume of lead will be greater than one gram of water. The density?æof lead is about 11 times more than that of water.?æ