One tablespoon holds 1/2 fluid ounce. A cup holds 8 fluid ounces, which is the same as 16 x 1/2 fluid ounce or 16 tablespoons.
There are 4 tablespoons in 1/4 cup. Half of a quarter cup is one-eighth of a cup (2 tablespoons); and half of one-eighth of a cup is 1/16 of a cup, or one tablespoon. Put another way, multiply to get the lowest common denominator: 4/16 = 1/4 cup (four into four = one, four into sixteen = four). So, one tablespoon is equal to 1/16 cup. Basically it's just the fractions we all learned in elementary school, so I'm sure you'll do just fine - good luck!
this model of the rock cycle shows how rocks change from 1 form to another
Way too complicated. 'Coffee' doesn't have a chemical structure. The flavonoids and alkaloids do, but there are about 300 of those compounds in a cup of coffee. Non-dairy creamer is the same, being that each of its components has a structure, but they don't combine to form one ultimate compound. The only thing that has a chemical formula in and of itself is sugar, with a formula of C12H22O11. If you're using something other than pure sucrose, like one of the monosaccharides, then the formula changes.
The experimenters were questioning the information they already knew and were seeking to find answers to many unknowns
There is no answer to that question. Only liquids can be converted that way. Think of it this way. 1 cup of feathers is going to weigh a lot less than a cup a nails.
A cup it 8 ounces. A stick of butter is 4 ounces, or half a cup. Two thirds of a cup would be roughly 5.3 ounces, so you would need approximately one and a third sticks of butter to equal 2/3rds of a cup.
The way I understand it, a good rule of thumb is to use 1 tbsp per desire cup of coffee. (In the example your question poses, that would mean 4 cups of coffee.)
fill a 6 oz cup about half way.
1 cup is 0.2365882368 liters or 0.2365882368 cubic decimeters. 3/8 = 0.375 of a cup are 0.0887205888 liters or 88.7205888 milliliters or 88.7205888 cubic centimeters. 16 Tablespoons equal 1 cup, so you can measure 6 tablespoons if you do not have a 3/8 cup measure. That is in US measurements. There are slightly different tablespoon measurements in the UK and metric systems.
Technically, it would be 5/16 cup. An easier way to measure it would be 5 tablespoons, or 1/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon.
no,the global ecosystem is connected one way or another
They help explain information in another way.
One stick plus 2 tablespoons or just half way between 1/2 and 3/4.
A walnut size of butter is about 2 tablespoons. This is just another way of explaining a specific measure of butter.
Using your mouth? Just kidding, another way of saying one fourth cup is, "a quarter cup" or "2 ounces".
Another word to explain that situation may be endurance.
Java is another way of saying coffee