1 dishsoap for about 3 cups of water
Some recipes (Or other mixes) might ask for 1 or more parts of water, 1 part being in relation to e.g. 3 parts of flour
if i read correctly, by dissolving chromium oxide (eskolaite) in nitric acid. the mixture also requires a certain amount of water, 6 parts water per three parts nitrate and 3 parts water crystilization.
3oz soda, 2 oz water and pour off 4 oz.
6 Water= H20 which represents one molecule. Which is 2 parts Hydrogen and 1 part Oxygen which would be 3 parts (atoms). So if it's TWO molecules of water, it doubles.
Recipe for hummingbird nectar is 3 parts warm water and 1 part REAL sugar FOR NOURISHMENT, no substitutes as they do not provide any nourishment. Mix thoroughly
1 part sugar 4 parts water (5 parts water if the temperature is higher than 90 degrees) the water has to be hot so the sugar will dissolve. Mix it so it dissolves all the way, and you are good to go. Refill feeder every 3 days after washing and cleaning them.
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.
3 parts grano to 1 part cement add neat water sparingly till desired mix
Either 3 parts oil to 5 parts of the other stuff or 5 parts oil to 3 parts of the other stuff (your question is not clear enough to indicate which).
Lime juice is a good substitute for tamarind. Mix it with water in equal parts if the recipe calls for paste mixed with water. eg. if the recipe asks for tamarind paste mixed into 1/3 cup water, mix 1/3 cup lime juice and 1/3 cup water.
Sand / cement ratio = 3 , that means: 1 part of cement to 3 parts of sand by volume , with sufficient water to get workable mixture.
If you are looking to make it into a perfume version you could mix it with 3 parts vodka or everclear and 1 part oil. For a body splash or spray mix 2 parts distilled water with 1 part oil.
There are multiple mixes of concretes for different uses. A common standard mix is 3:2:1 mix 3 parts aggregate, 2 parts sand, 1 part portland cement, mixed with about 1 part water (don't make the slurry too wet), just enough to wet the material and cause it to adhere in a mass plus a little bit. A mix I like is a 3:1-1/2:1 mix. It's a little bit tougher mix. for mortar again a 3:2:1 mix of sand, cement, lime with just enough water to make it workable. For grouts I'll use a little less sand or a fine beach sand, if it's not sticky enough I'll increase the cement.
Put 2 parts corn starch with 1 part water and mix well and microwave for 2-3 minutes and let cool. Done
A water- tower has 3 parts. Hope that will help.
I have 3 children and I have never done it but a nurse at my job says its all she ever used and she has 3 healthy teenage sons. You just mix equal parts sterile water with the carnation milk, for a great , inexpensive formula.