Fill 3 qt jar, and empty into 5 qt jar. Fill 3 qt jar again, and empty 2 qt into 5 qt jar, 1 qt left.
There can be no conversion.An inch is a measure of length in 1-dimensional space while a quart is a measure of volume in 3-dimensional space. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is fundamentally flawed.
2 times 1 quart = 2 pints 1 pint = 0.5 quart
Yes, with about 150mL to spare.
4 cups. In US measure: 1 quart = 4 cups And 1 cup = 0.25 quart. There are 32 US fluid ounces (2 pints, or 4 cups) in 1 US quart (946.4 ml). There are 40 Imperial fluid ounces (2 pints) in 1 Imperial quart (1,136 ml). Note that there is no 'cup' in the Imperial system, it is best to use pints or half pints, and not 'cups'.
Depends on what the "quart" consists of ... liquid, dry measure ... ???
1 mm
1/2 quart = 2 cups = 1pint
I think jam is sold by mass/weight rather than volume, but if you want to measure the volume, a typical jam/jelly jar is less than 1 liter, so use milliliters to measure volume.
In US measure: 1 quart = 4 cups and 1 cup = 0.25 quart. There are 32 US fluid ounces (2 pints or 4 cups) in 1 US quart (946.4 ml). There are 40 Imperial fluid ounces (2 pints) in 1 Imperial quart (1,136 ml). Note that there is no 'cup' in the Imperial system, it is best to use pints or half pints,
1/4 quart
No 4 cups. In US measure: 1 quart = 4 cups And 1 cup = 0.25 quart. There are 32 US fluid ounces (2 pints, or 4 cups) in 1 US quart (946.4 ml). There are 40 Imperial fluid ounces (2 pints) in 1 Imperial quart (1,136 ml). Note that there is no 'cup' in the Imperial system, it is best to use pints or half pints, and not 'cups'.
One US quart is equal to 946.353 milliliters. For many practical purposes, a rule of thumb that is often used is 1 quart is equal to 1 liter.