No Clue Why Should I'm Only 1
Yes, by using a hydrometer.
The long bottle openers that bartenders use.
Before water bottles strangely enough a bucket with a cup was used
Yes, the word 'bottles' is both a noun (bottle, bottles) and a verb (bottle, bottles, bottling, bottled).The noun 'bottles' is the plural form of the singular noun 'bottle', a word for a type of container; a word for a thing.The verb 'bottles' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to bottle; meaning to fill such a container with liquid.
Yes, the noun 'bottle' is a countable noun, the plural form is bottles. Example: There were three bottles on the tray, one bottle of Ginger Ale and two bottles of cherry cola.
If you mean the "pear in the bottle" brandy, the bottles are placed on the trees before the pears start to grow and they just grow right into the bottle.
On bottles....... -.-
plural: bottles
A cork is in a bottle or in 2 bottles.
it depends on the size of the pour and the size of the bottle. if it is a 5 ounce pour and you are using standard 750 ml bottles, then you will need about 40 bottles
Yes. Cleaning up exploded bottles is not fun.
The typical soda / juice / water bottle is made from polythylene terephthalate (PET or PETE, plastic number 1).