3 1/2
It is not possible to measure the distance to the moon in cups of sugar. The distance to the moon is approximately 238,855 miles.
Depends on the depth of the cup measuring the sugar.
Not many, if you could convert all the sugar into energy by E=mc². ≈9.0 × 10^16 joules per kilogram
Depends how big the cup is... If it's about 15cm high, then about 10,9635,924 cups If it's about 20cm high then about 9,4624,002 cups If it's higher, then you got ya'self a pretty big cup!
4 days
It is not possible to measure the distance to the moon in cups of sugar. The distance to the moon is approximately 238,855 miles.
Depends on the depth of the cup measuring the sugar.
3 and a half. Note the goofy movie when goofy wakes up and asks max "how many cups of sugar does it take to get to the moon?". Max replies "3 and a half". Goofy seems happy with this answer and falls back to sleep. It also it takes 1 and 1/2 cups sugar to get to the moon from Africa. Though in reality it takes approximately 8,750,000 cups of sugar to reach the moon.
Not many, if you could convert all the sugar into energy by E=mc². ≈9.0 × 10^16 joules per kilogram
it would take ten cups because 18 x 2 = 36 = 3 dozen 15/3= 5 cups x 2 cups = 10 cups
2 CUPS The previous answer is wrong, the answer is One Cup, there are Three, and YOU take one, so YOU have one cup.
There is not enough information to answer this accurately since different recipes call for different amounts of sugar. If one batch takes 1/4 cup of sugar, then 13 batches will take 3 and 1/4 cups of sugar.
Depends how big the cup is... If it's about 15cm high, then about 10,9635,924 cups If it's about 20cm high then about 9,4624,002 cups If it's higher, then you got ya'self a pretty big cup!
that is 7 cups.
15 cups
a trillion tons
16 cups