Want this question answered?
A jug is not a real unit of measurement A gallon jug? If by that, then a jug can fit around 3.8 liters to 4 liters.
The answer depends on which country's currency the question is about!
Okay so fill up the seven liter jug completely and pour as much as you can into the 4 liter jug. You now have 3 liters in the 7 liter jug and 4 liters in the 4 liter jug. Pour the 4 liter out half way, now you have 2 liters in the 4 liter jug. Now pour the contents of the 4 liter jug into the 7 liter jug that has 3 liters in it. You know have a jug with 5 liters.
* Fill 4 liter jug. * Empty the 4 liter jug into the 5 liter jug. * Again fill 4 liter jug. * Fill up the 5 liter jug with the 4 liter jug. * There are now 3 liters in the 4 liter jug.
It would take 2.52 bottles to fill a gallon jug.
fill the 3 litre jug, pour it into the 5 litre jug. refill the 3 litre jug, pour into the 5 litre jug until full you will have 1 litre left in the 3 litre jug.
Fill small 3 liter jug with water. Pour into large 8 liter jug. Repeat. Now 6 liters of water in large jug. Repeat again but stop when large jug full. Leaves 1 liter in small jug. Empty large jug. Pour water from small jug into large jug. Refill small jug and pour into large jug. There are now 4 liters of water in large jug.
Assuming the jug was empty, it would require 1 litre. If the jug contained any amount of water, the requirement would be 1 litre minus however much was in the jug already.
There are 6600 milliliters in a 6.6 liter jug, because 1liter - 1000milliliters
She has to figure out a way to accurately get eight liters in the 10-liter jug. And here's how she would do it. She fills the 7-liter jug with pond water and dumps its contents into the 10-liter jug. So the larger one has seven liters and the smaller is empty. She then refills the smaller and uses it to top off the larger one, which leaves four liters in the smaller one. Next, she dumps the full 10-liter jug back into the pond (why waste water?) and then empties the contents of the smaller one into the larger one, which means there are now four liters of water in the larger jug. So far, so good She refills the smaller jug from the pond and once again tops off the larger jug, which leaves just one liter in the smaller one. Next, she dumps the larger one back into the pond, transfers the one liter from the smaller to the larger, fills the smaller to the top, and then pours it all into the large one, which makes a total of eight liters in the larger jug. Simple! LOL Mary happens to notice a sharp rock on the ground. She first pours 7 liters of water into the big jug. She then refills the 7 liter jug and tops off the 10 liter jug, leaving 4 liters in the 7 liter jug. She uses the sharp rock to mark the 7 liter jug. After she empties the 10 liter jug, she fills the 7 liter jug to the line and dumps it into the 10 liter jug twice.
Yes... First fill the 8 litre jug completely from the tap and then pour the contents into the 15 litre jug. Next fill the 8 litre jug completely from the tap and pour the contents into the 15 litre jug until it is full and you will be left with exactly 1 litre of water in the 8 litre jug.
There are 1000 mL in a 1 L jug.