Well, that is a tricky question because, well, Canadians do not use ounces. We use Millilitres and Litres.
Assuming the US ounce and Canadian ounce are the same which I believe they are, there would be 40 ounces in a Canadian quart. 32 ounces in a US quart. 20 ounces in a Canadian pint, 16 in US. 10 ounces in a Canadian cup and 8 in US. If you are reading a Canadian receipt chances are it's in US measurement's as Canadians are so Americanised they don't even know the Canadian measurement's themselves.
The Canadian quart is equal to 40 ounces and the American quart is equal to 32 ounces. There are four Canadian quarts in a Canadian gallon and there are four US quarts in the US gallon. However there are exacly five US quarts in a Canadian gallon.
That is 35.274 ounces.
Yes, the canadian pottery barn sells the same items as the american one. Although they are in different countries they are branches of the same company.
500 ml is equivalent to approximately 17.5975 Canadian fluid ounces.
The litre is international and always the same. 14 litres is 493.835ounces.
There is no such thing as a "Canadian Cup" .
I think it should be the same, Canadian money and american. When i went to Canada, i used american money, and received Canadian back as change. I counted it, and it equaled the same amount that i would have gotten in the U.S.
Yes. Metres is Canadian and Meters is American
First, there is no such thing as a "litre Canadian" . A litre is 33.814 ounces of water.
Yes they are, but European ounces are rarely used in shopping in most of the world now. Everything is metric in most of the world except America.
I think you are confused......Canadian English is same as American English .not another language.So you say Ice-cream .....