a unit normally stands for 1 glass of an alcoholic consumption. This mean, most basically, 1 glass of beer (5% alcohol).
Standard glasses of wine, shot, beer etc. are based on the unit system. This means that a standard glass of wine, and standard glass of beer and a standard shot glass contain more or less the same amount of alcohol (of course some spirits and wines/beers are stronger than the other).
Most basic, a unit of alcohol means 1 liter with 1% alcohol in it.
Thus 4 units equals four liters with 1% alcohol, which then again equals 4 glasses (250 mL) of 5% beer.
Hope that helps
It depends on how much total volume of the beverage you have. For a standard US pint, a beer at 5% ABV will have about 0.6 fluid ounces of alcohol.
Depending on your weight, state of health etc., you body can dispose of a unit of alcohol in 30 - 60 minutes.
How ever much it is!
That depends on how much the bear had to drink.
You cannot determine the units of alcohol just from the quantity of the total vodka.Generally vodka has 40% alcohol in it.
1. Alcohol 2. 2 units of ATP (energy units of living organisms)
There are 3 units of alcohol in a 750ml bottle of West Coast cooler
Any Alcohol Anonymous can advise on the alcohol units, as can medical centers such as doctors offices and drop in centers. Online, information can be found at the alcohol education trust, which is aimed at young adults as well as posters and leaflets. Within the uk the NHS is running alcohol awareness meetings and have a section devoted to alcohol units on their site. Drink Aware also have information on alcohol units found in various drinks.
1 unit of alcohol = 10 ml = 10 cc → 1 cc = 1/10 or 0.1 units of alcohol.
Alcohol
2-3 units a day
you will need about 3 - 4 for men and for women it is 2-3
It is recommended you drink no more than 4 units of alcohol a week when taking methatrexate. This is due ti the medication interacting with alcohol in your liver and causing damage.
5% of 355 ml = 5/100 × 355 ml = 17.75 ml of alcohol (= 1.775 units of alcohol, 1 unit = 10 ml)
4 units