As our world turns, our bodies fade, and our wisdom withers, you
have brought a question that has many answers and all are true.
Listen now . . .
-- If the bottle is one gallon, then 12.8 such glasses can be filled,
or the same one of them 12.8 times.
-- If the bottle is one quart, then 3.2 of them.
-- If the bottle is one pint, then 1.6 of them.
-- If the bottle is two liters, then 6.76280454... rounded transcendental glasses.
-- If the bottle is one half-liter, then 1.69060114... of the same breed of glass.
But in the strict, literal interpretation of your question ... the 'pshat' as it were ...
though you live long and prosper and travel the face of the Earth, it is a virtual
slam-dunk certainty and a safe bar bet that you will never find any 10-ounce
glasses in a bottle, and if you do, you cannot get them out and the bottle survive.
About 10, five ounce servings
6 and 2/5 glasses
You can fill 7.2 glasses (approximately 7 full glasses) with 2 quarts of liquid in 10 ounce glasses.
1 gallon equals 128 oz. There would be 12.8 units of 10 oz each.
Depending on how much you pour per glass, there are 10 to 12 glasses in a 1.5 liter bottle.
If you have 8-ounce glasses, that much water will fill 7 of them. If your glasses hold 10 ounces, then 5.6 of them. If your glasses hold 12 ounces, then (4 and 2/3) of them. If your glasses hold 16 ounces, then 3.5 of them.
There are approximately 164.21 glasses of 10 oz capacity in a 58.6 liter keg.
many variables such as thickness that could effect the weight
Ten of them.
A gallon of tea consists of 128 ounces of liquid. If a glass is twelve ounces, one gallon would produce 10 and 2/3 glasses.
it varies between 3 and 10 gallons... So somewhere between 24 and 80 glasses of your 16 oz glasses. ha.
If you assume everyone will have two 6 ounce glasses that would be about 10 gallons