No, a litre is more than a fifth.
1/5th of a US Gallon. Takes Five fifths to equal 1 gallon.
talk the another same bottle and pour into it. and pour it in a same level.
It's close to a "fifth"Before the adoption of metric units, booze in the U.S. was most commonly bottled in quarts and "fifths." A quart is one quarter of a gallon, and a fifth is -- you guessed it -- a fifth of a gallon. Now, liquor comes in one-liter and 750-ml bottles, which are about the same size as the quart and fifth, respectively.A 750-ml bottle -- the most common size for wine -- is 0.750 liter. In other words, it's three quarters of a liter (because 3/4 = 0.75).One fifth of a US gallon is 25.6 ounces, and 0.75 liter equals 25.4 ounces, so a 750-ml bottle is very close to a fifth.
Nevermind... Yes it is. A fifth is 757ml which is 1/5th of a gallon
#s on plastic bottle such as 13.21B 01 006 4 also 13:14HJ01064 on same bottle?
No. The 20 ounce bottle is just a tiny bit short of 0.6 liters.
For a 2 liter bottle it is $1.88 and it is the same price in their money as well.
The 2 liter bottle has the same worth regardless of what it is filled with, probable 1/10th of a cent or less.
No ! The coke will have the same density regardless of the volume of coke. Density of a liquid depends upon the liquid identity, nature, and temperature; but neither upon the mass nor the volume of the liquid.
about 300mg. about the same as 2bags of low fat crisps
A single two liter bottle of soda is equal to about 72 fluid ounces. This means that compared to 60 fluid ounces for the same price, the two-liter is a better deal.
No, its just like having and open bottle of alcohol in your car it's the same punishment (I know from experience)