liters
Because a black plastic bowl has more shine and also it is more warmer than the white plastic bowl!:)
Volume is measured in milliliters, liters, cubic centimeters, cubic meters etc. for the metric system. Grams, kilograms etc are units for measuring mass.
bowl is conductor
No. Water is oxygen to them so they need to be in water in the plastic bowl.
No, the term 'plastic bowl' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence.The noun phrase 'plastic bowl' is made up of the common noun 'bowl' described by the adjective 'plastic'.A noun phrase can functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The plastic bowl contains cauliflower. (subject of the sentence)I peeked a look at what the plastic bowl contained. (subject of the relative clause)She had a plastic bowl full of crayons. (direct object of the verb 'had')He rummaged the cupboard for a cover to the plastic bowl. (object of the preposition 'to')A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing. Examples of proper nouns for the common noun 'plastic bowl' are Tupperware or Farberware.
Because plastic will melt.
A plastic bowl is an insulator.
No, the volume of milk remains the same when transferred from a carton to a bowl as long as no spillage or evaporation occurs. The amount of milk poured out of the carton into the bowl is equal to the amount initially in the carton.
Yes, a plastic bowl can float on water because plastic is less dense than water. This means that it displaces enough water to stay afloat.
really hard plastic
To find the number of ladles of punch in a bowl, we first calculate the volume of the bowl and the ladle. The volume of a sphere (bowl) is given by the formula (V = \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3). For a bowl with a radius of 9 inches, the volume is approximately 3053.63 cubic inches. The volume of the ladle, assuming it is a simple cylinder with a radius of 3 inches (half of 6 inches) and height of 6 inches, is about 56.55 cubic inches. Dividing the volume of the bowl by the volume of the ladle gives approximately 54 ladles of punch in the bowl.
The best way would be to use the ancient Archemedean way: take a bowl or similar object that can fully contain the rock in question. Put the bowl in a large pan. Fill the bowl completely with water, all the way up to the very rim. Now, submerge the rock completely in the bowl, so that it is entirely underwater. Water will spilled out of the bowl into the pan. Remove the bowl from the pan, and pour the water from the pan into a measuring cup - the volume of that water is the volume of the rock.