Which drink is stronger in terms of pure alcohol? A glass of wine, a mug of beer, a shot of liquor, or are they all the same?
The answer is:
A shot of liquor
In the US, a "standard" drink is 0.6 ounces of pure alcohol, regardless of the beverage involved.
Pure ethyl alcohol. Only a drunk would drink it.
Wine is a product containing alcohol as is beer, but pure alcohol is not a drink because you'd probably be dead the minute you drink it if you're lucky. But alcoholic beverages contain alcohol, but aren't 100% alcohol.
The recommended amount is one standard drink (0.6 oz or 14 ml of pure alcohol) a day for women, 28 for men. Doubling that for either sex is "quite a bit" in terms of health.
Rubbing alcohol is a solution. What you buy labeled as rubbing alcohol is a mixture of various concentrations of methanol, ethanol, isopropanol, and water, usually around 70% alcohol and the rest water.
technical ethanol? if this is meant to be "pure" alcohol a.k.a ethanol if you drink this in large amounts you will almost definetly die of alcohol posioning. This is why so many people died from drinking moonshine because it had such a high alcohol concentration in the drink.
In the US, a "standard" drink is 0.6 ounces of pure alcohol, regardless of the beverage involved.
A stranded drink contains 14 gram or 1/2 ounce in 650ml of alcohol.
J20 does not contain alcohol, it is natural fuit mixed with other chemicals for preserving the drink, because if you relise, you may find blobs of stuff at the botton of j20 bottles, this is pure fruit.
It signifies the "strength" of the liquor, and can give you an estimate of how much alcohol is in the drink by percentage. For example, if you have a 1.5oz of a 40% ABV spirit, 0.6oz is pure alcohol.
Assuming you mean pure alcohol, there are approximately 164.1 calories in a US fluid ounce. However, even assuming you could obtain it, you should never drink pure alcohol as the danger of poisoning is very great. Alcohol can kill.
Just that, ethyl alcohol AKA ethanol... It's the alcohol we drink.