It will be mostly likely 5L because 500mL will be more of less capacity so the Answer: is 5L.
it is 5l's
5l is greater than 500ml
No
500ml is less than 5L
Since there are 100 ml in a L, 500ml should = 5L
pour out one litre from 5L bucket :D LOL
== == == == Fill the 3l and dump into 5l. Fill 3l again pour into 5l til full, you now have 1l left in 3 l container. dump 5 onto ground, pour the 1l from the 3l container into the 5l, then fill 3l and dump into the 5l....Presto exactly 4 liters are contained in the 5l container. ALTERNATIVELY (i) Fill the 5l and then fill 3l from 5l. This leaves 2l in the 5l. (ii) Empty 3l (iii) Pour the 2l from the 5l into the 3l. This leaves 1l of spare capacity in the 3l. (iv) Fill the 5l again (v) Fill the 3l from the 5l. This leaves 4l in the 5l.ALTERNATE 2:If flow is steady, time may be used to help. Take amount of time it takes to fill 5 liter bucket, divide by 5 then multiply by 4. Answer will be how long you must let the water flow into the 5 liter bucket to fill it upto 4 liters.
1.6 litres
Fill up 8 liter bucket and 5 liter bucket. Pour 3 liter out from the 5. Pour 6 liter from the 8. Add the remains from the 5l back to the remains in the 8 liter and you have 4 liters.
Fill the 5L jug. Pour into 3L jug so that it is full and 2L remain in the 5L jug. Empty the 3L jug and then pour 2L from the 5L jug into the 3L jug. Fill the 5L jug again. So now you have 5L in the 5L jug and 2L in the 3L jug. Total of 7L.
Multiply liters by 1,000 to get ml
Fill the 4 litre bucket and pour it into the 5 litre. Re-fill the 4 litre bucket and pour again. That gives you 5 litres (and 3 litres left in the smaller bucket). Empty the 5 litre bucket and put the remaining contents from the 4 litre into it. fill the 4 litre again - and pour it into the 5 litre bucket until it's full. Since you can only add 2 litres to the existing 3 litres, what you have left in the smaller bucket is... 2 litres !