Yes, they are. However, you should use standardised tablespoons and teaspoons (measuring spoons) because normal spoons often do not match standard measures.
Tablespoon, teaspoon and ton are units of measurement. They begin with the letter t.
The units in this problem are teaspoons.
A teaspoon is a measure of capacity, not of weight. Therefore, the two units are incompatible.
Pay attention that a teaspoon is a cooking measure for a volume. It means 4.92892159 milliliters.The weight in gram is something different.Actually mass is measured in grams, not weight.Have you EVER seen a recipe that called for any ingredient measured to that many decimal places? A teaspoon is about 5 ml and many teaspoons are marked as such, even though it's not "exact".
Unable to answer without knowing what you are measuring so that the density can be determined, because of unit mismatch: teaspoons are units of volume and grams are units of mass.
Yes, they are. However, you should use standardised tablespoons and teaspoons (measuring spoons) because normal spoons often do not match standard measures.
Yes, in cooking these are basic measures. A teaspoon holds 5 ml of water, a tablespoon holds 15 .
When using shortening for cooking or when baking there are standard units of measurements. The units of measurements are cups, tablespoon and teaspoons.
Tablespoon, teaspoon and ton are units of measurement. They begin with the letter t.
The units in this problem are teaspoons.
Depends on what you are weighing, since there is no standard conversion of a volume unit (teaspoons, tbl etc...) to weight units (pounds, ounces etc...). This is because a tablespoon of lead (Pb) will weigh more than a tablespoon of meringue will, and so forth. So it is not possible to tell you how many quarter teaspoons are in a pound without knowing what substance you are measuring.
A teaspoon is a measure of capacity, not of weight. Therefore, the two units are incompatible.
it depends what type of substance but for example nutmeg: 5 tablespoons would be the same as 10 grams
15 ml in a tablespoon.
Unable to answer without knowing what you are measuring so that the density can be determined, because of unit mismatch: teaspoons are units of volume and grams are units of mass.
Pay attention that a teaspoon is a cooking measure for a volume. It means 4.92892159 milliliters.The weight in gram is something different.Actually mass is measured in grams, not weight.Have you EVER seen a recipe that called for any ingredient measured to that many decimal places? A teaspoon is about 5 ml and many teaspoons are marked as such, even though it's not "exact".
Two and a half - if your units are teaspoons.