Yeah. Am always choosing half full glass of water. Because am always looks forward.
Air is matter - even if you can't see it. IF the glass were truly empty (a vacuum) the water would enter (and fill) the glass.
Pour the water from one full glass into one empty glass so that the resulting arrangement is alternating.
Take the second and the fourth full glass, and empty the contents into the second and fourth empty glass. Put the now-empty glasses back where they were. Now the glasses alternate between full, empty, full, empty, full, empty, full, empty, full, and empty.
Hmmm... I think this shld b a better ans. When in a cold room, the glass will contract. So, when taken out of cold room and placed in hot room, expansion will take place. As the glass has uneven surface, the process of expansion will cause the crack.
Imagine a glass with water to the middle of it(half). You can say "The glass it's half full" or " The glass is half empty". Generally, if you say the 1st you are a optimist, the 2nd you are pessimist. So if you are a glass half full kind of person means you see situations in a optimist point of view.
They are very practical. If you had a glass half filled with water, an optimist would say it was half full, a pessimist would say it was half empty but and engineer would observe that the glass was twice as big as it needed to be.
Water vapors are condensed on the cold surface.
I would not use "fully empty" in a sentence because it is redundant and unnecessary. If something is "empty", it's empty. You do not need to say "fully empty" because empty cannot be anything but nothing. There is no further defining words needed.The glass was empty.I carried an empty pitcher.My gas gauge read E for empty.
The glass is actually full. Full of half air and half water. As for the water content, technically, there is no difference, except as it pertains to the process of filling or emptying, i.e. if it was filled and you drank some, it is half-empty; if it was empty and being filled, it is half-full.
crack
Hear the fiendish answer:Get someone else to move the glass for you. Take the paper.The trick is in the wording of the sentence. All you have to do is to find a legal loophole.This is not just some stupid answer, if you look at the question closely enough, you might get some very useful info, like the glass does not have to be upside down. Or the environment in which the problem is set is special. Or it does not have to be you who moves the glass, etc...I would get a pitcher of water and fill the glass to overflowing. The water should carry the paper out.
standard glass is 8oz, but it would depend on the glass.