10 US fluid ounces = 295.735 ml
It is approx 3 millilitres.
An ounce is a unit of weight. A fluid once is a unit of volume, equal to the volume of one ounce of water. If you are measuring water, 1 ounce = 1 fluid ounce. If not, it won't.
Yes, it is.
1 international ounce = 28,349 523 1 g; because the density of water is approx. 1 the volume 28,349 523 mL.
No. A fluid ounce is a measure of volume, related to liquids and fluids. An ounce is a unit of weight or mass. A glass of water can have both - the glass and water together have a particular weight or mass but the water inside the glass has volume and is measured in fluid ounces.
if I calculate correctly there are roughly 29.57 milliliters in 1 US fluid ounce, but keep in mind that an ounce is a measure of weight while a milliliter is a measure of volume. a fluid ounce is a hybrid measure - the volume of pure water that weighs 1 ounce - so if you are talking about any substance that's *not* water you cannot calculate the relationship between volume and weight without more information.
An ounce is a unit of weight. A fluid once is a unit of volume, equal to the volume of one ounce of water. If you are measuring water, 1 ounce = 1 fluid ounce. If not, it won't.
Yes, it is.
a Tablespoon is a measure of volume and an ounce can be either a measure of volume or a measure of weight. one level tablespoon is equal to one ounce of volume, but not necessarily one ounce of weight
1 international ounce = 28,349 523 1 g; because the density of water is approx. 1 the volume 28,349 523 mL.
No. A fluid ounce is a measure of volume, related to liquids and fluids. An ounce is a unit of weight or mass. A glass of water can have both - the glass and water together have a particular weight or mass but the water inside the glass has volume and is measured in fluid ounces.
if I calculate correctly there are roughly 29.57 milliliters in 1 US fluid ounce, but keep in mind that an ounce is a measure of weight while a milliliter is a measure of volume. a fluid ounce is a hybrid measure - the volume of pure water that weighs 1 ounce - so if you are talking about any substance that's *not* water you cannot calculate the relationship between volume and weight without more information.
Coffee is roughly same weight/volume as water. So there will be 6 teaspoons of coffee in 1 ounce.
There are 29.57 milliliters in a fluid ounce. 1 cc (cubic centimeter) has the same volume as 1 millilter. So there are 29.57 cc in an ounce (volume).
The volume ratio is approx. 10:1.
The density of the dry material would have to be known to calculate this. In theory there could be no difference in volume. Most foods get smaller as they loose water though. Which means the volume of the dry food will likely be much less than the wet/fresh food. A rough estimate is 1/3 to 1/4 a volume of the dry equals 1 volume of the wet/fresh.
One ounce of what? One ounce of hydrogen has a larger volume than, say, one ounce of seawater. And one ounce of hydrogen at sea level has a smaller volume that one ounce of hydrogen at, say, 30 kilometers above sea level. Please be more specific... ;-)
1/3 ounce of water is approximately 9.3 teaspoons