Two bottles.
Did you ever wonder where that weird number of "16.9 fl oz" came from ?
How they happened to decide that it was just the right amount to put in
your bottle ?
That 16.9 fl oz is exactly 1/2 of a liter (within 0.04%). The American manufacturer
has to package his product in sizes that look like weird numbers to you, because
that's the only way he has a prayer of selling his stuff outside the USA.
The water-bottle guy sells you "16.9 fl oz" at a time, so that all he has to do is
print a different label and he can sell "0.5 liters" in the same bottle to the rest
of the world, where they learned to stop hating the liter and dumped the fl oz
a long time ago.
2
1 liter = 33.814 oz
1 oz = 0.02 L
About 1/2 liter.
16,9 fluid ounces = 0,499 792 6 liter
16.9 fluid ounces = about 1/2 liter.
two
2
8
You would have to drink about 7.6 1/2-liter bottles to equal one gallon.
No, you're not even close. Ten 0.5 liter bottles is over a gallon.
Approximately 2 bottles
9
4
You would have to drink about 7.6 1/2-liter bottles to equal one gallon.
It will take about 7.6 2-liter bottles to equal four US gallons.
No, you're not even close. Ten 0.5 liter bottles is over a gallon.
1 liter is equal to approximately 0.59 bottles of water.
Approximately 2 bottles
Are these 2 liter bottles? If so about 20.
Based on your spelling of liter I guess you are American (conversion is different for European litres): 1 liter ≈ 33.814 fl oz → 33.814 fl oz ÷ 8 fl oz/bottle ≈ 4.23 bottles → you could fill four 8 fl oz bottles from 1 liter of water, and have a little left over. Alternatively, you need to drink a little under 4 1/4 eight ounce bottles of water to drink 1 liter of water.
The answer depends on the size of the bottles.
0.6
1 liter
4
Erm, 1 if it's a 1 litre bottle.