There is probably no definite to this question as the size of tea cups varies widely. It is probably safe to say that for most, the volume is less than 1/2 pint.
There are 20 - 200 ml in 4 liters4 L = 4000 ml4000 ml / 200 ml = 20
1.2 liters subtracted by 200 millimeters = -198.8
To prevent a tea bag from floating in your cup of tea, you can use a spoon to hold it down or place a small saucer on top of the tea bag to keep it submerged.
200 liters of pure, clean water at standard temperature have 200 kilograms of mass. On earth, that amount of mass weighs 1,960 newtons (440.9 pounds). Credit for this answer goes to Alcohen2006
Correct, the total thermal energy in a cup and a pot of tea at the same temperature would be the same. However, the pot of tea would have more thermal energy per unit volume compared to the cup, as it contains more tea.
A cup of tea usually only has a tablespoon or so of milk added to it. Not litres.
200liters = 845.35 cups
The volume of cocoa in a cup is best measured in millilitres.
A tea cup can hold up to 5 liters
4/5 of a cup is 200 ml.
I think its a 250 mL or 1 L I Just Learned It..8 US fluid ounces = 236.588237 milliliters1 liter = 33.8140227 US fluid ounces
It remains 200 mg. Placing it anywhere does not change its mass
It depends on the size of the cup !... A 'typical' mug would contain around 300 ml.
It dissolves, sweetening and cooling the tea.
He has a cup of tea.
There is no such English phrase as "tea of a cup." You either have a cup of tea, or you have tea in a cup.
A Cup. A table spoon a tea spoon a germ a atom