1 part= 1 ounce
at least when you are measuring alcohol it is
one part of liquid added to 50 parts of a different liquid
For every 1 measurment of water you add twice as much liquid. Example: If you measure 1/2 cup of water you add 1 cup of liquid If you measure 1 cup of water you add 2 cups of liquid. You just double the amount of liquid for every measure of water
There is no given measure for a part. The measure to use is dependent on the measure used for other "parts". 2 parts water to 3 parts flour and 1 part sugar, will give you a consistent batter despite the measure used. It could be tablespoons to get a 3 ounce amount of batter, cups to get 3 pints of batter, gallons to make 6 gallons of batter and so on. Parts indicates that each amount is relative to the other parts. Parts usually imply a volume measure, not a weight measure.
Search: liquid measure trailer levels 1-20
No, its a liquid mixture. It is the chemical formula of water: 2 parts hydrogen and 1 part oxygen.
It can be easy to measure one part bleach to ten parts water. Simply search for a cup or container and fill it once with bleach. Dump this bleach into a larger container and measure out ten of the same cup's worth into the container with the bleach.
You can choose any units you wish, e.g. ml, grams, cups, ounces, etc. Just measure 1 part water and add 3 parts chalk mix. Example: measure out 1 cup of water and add 3 cups of chalk mix.
Mg for measuring crime. Ml is the volume measure.
1/2 pint liquid measure equates to 16 US tablespoons.
For liquid measure, the main units were the Log, Hin, and Bat, related as: 1 Hin = 12 Logs 1 Bat = 6 Hin
Parts per Million and Parts per Billion. Parts of a solute per Million parts of the Solvent.
Whether ice cream or some other measured object or liquid, a gallon is divided into quarts, four of them to a gallon.