0.4576704 cubic inch which is about one and a half teaspoons (1.5 teaspoons)
384 Fluid Ounces is equivalent to 3 Gallons.
There is no way to compare. It's like comparing apples to oranges. A pound of lead may only take up a few fluid ounces of volume, but a pound of feathers would take up hundreds of fluid ounces of volume. There is no direct correlation between units of weight and units of volume. The density of lead is 11.34 oz/fluid oz; so a pound of lead would take up only 1.411 fluid ounces of volume. By comparison, gold has a density of 19.3 oz/fluid oz; so a pound of gold would take up only 0.829 fluid oz. (This is using Avoirdupois ounces, not Troy ounces.)
8 oz. is the volume.
Depends on the substance you are measuring - there is no standard conversion of a volume measure (teaspoons, tbl, cups etc...) to a weight measure (ounces, grams, pounds etc...). This is because, for example, 3 teaspoons of lead will weigh far more than 3 teaspoons of feathers will. This variablity of weight between the same volume of substances means there is not a standard volume to weight conversion, or a weight to volume conversion for that matter.
12 oz of lead
One is a liquid measurement and the other is weight. <><><><><> It is technically correct to say "fluid ounce" when referring to volume. The term "ounce" is also, technically, a unit of mass, not a unit of weight. While many people refer to mass and weight equally, they are not the same thing. Also, "fluid ounce" is not specific enough. You need to say "US Fluid Ounce", "Imperial Fluid Ounce", or "US Regulation Fluid Ounce", otherwise your answer is indeterminate.
1 and 2/3 of a cup :)
oz are a measure of weight; whereaspints are a measure of volume,so it depends upon [the density of] the substance which has a volume of 2/3 pint.If you meant how many fluid ounces (fl oz) in 2/3 pint then it is no problem as fl oz are a measure of volume:In UK, where 1 pt = 20 fl oz2/3 pint = 2/3 x 20 fl oz = 40/3 fl oz= 131/3 fl oz≈ 13.33 fl ozIn USA, where 1 pt = 16 fl oz2/3 pint = 2/3 x 16 fl oz = 32/3 fl oz= 102/3 fl oz≈ 10.67 fl oz
It depends on the volume of the cup. As most glasses are 180ml, the answer is 1.
It all depends upon the density of of the substance which has a volume of 0.12 fl oz; for example 0.12 fl oz of mercury will be heavier than 0.12 fl oz of hydrogen. A fluid ounce (fl oz) is a measure of volume An ounce (oz) is a measure of mass: There are related by density: density = mass/volume → mass = volume × density
20 oz is the volume. Fluid ounces measure volume, not weight.
A cup is a measure of volume. Oz is a volume of weight. An cup of oil will be fewer oz than a cup of thick syrup.