Usually not. Bottles are not normally digestible. And as to their unknown contents ....
24 qts 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
1 gallon is equal to 3.8 liters or 4 quarts, that is why they are refered to as quarts (one quarter gallon)
Take a tin can with a lid. Fill it approximately with half of water. Heat the can on a candle flame till the water boils. Let the water boil for a few minutes. Blow out the candle. Immediately put the lid tightly on the can. Be careful in handling the hot can. Put the can carefully in a shallow metallic vessel or a washbasin. Pour fresh water over the can.THE CAN GETS DISTORTED DUE TO THE AIR PRESSURE EXERTED.If you can't get a tin can, take a soft plastic bottle. Fill it with hot water. Empty the bottle and immediately cap it tightly. Place the bottle under running water.
Take 1 cup as 1/2 a pint, 2 cups = 1 pint > Ratio of juice : water = 1 : 7 = 12.5% juice > So if: 1 quart = 87.5% (0.875) Then : x quart = 12.5% (0.125) > Then x = 1 / 7 quarts = 0.142857 quarts = 135.19 ml (if quarts US) = 162.36 ml (if quarts UK)
1 gallon = 4 quarts13 gallons = 52 quarts
8.7 quarts to be exact or 10 quarts to be safe
24 qts 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
no, read the back of the phenphedrine bottle.
it takes thousands of years for a water bottle to decompose.
double the amount of water that fits inside the bottle.
Nothing. The bottle is now truly empty.
350 minutes
Yes, you can.
If you take hot water and put it in a bottle some of the water will vaporize into the air and then due to the colder environment around the bottle condense against the bottle walls leaving the "fog" effect on the edges. What your actually seeing is tiny water droplets on the side of the bottle.
Yeah!!
when you take a water bottle out of the fridge, it is the water on the outside. also when there is water on your window and it is not raing.
well its all about to you... i use about half a water bottle. but if you have a weak stomach then id use like 75 of the water bottle.