A half bushel is two pecks.
It depends on the brand. Some brands have so much sugar (of various kinds) that one bushel's worth of corn would not be enough for 400 cans. Others are low enough that one bushel would sweeten as many as 600 cans.
There's the last bushel of corn! I wonder what the price of a bushel of beets would be today.
The simple answer is that it has a volume of a bushel. A bushel is about 35 liters or about one and a quarter cubic feet. The imperial bushel is about 3% larger. As for the actual dimensions of a bushel basket, I would have to get back to you on that, but I would guess about 18" diameter and a foot tall.
The correct syntax would be "different kinds of fuel".
Well, seeing as WikiAnswers states the following: "Jobs and Education question: How many peck in a bushel? Four pecks in a bushel, and two gallons in a peck, so eight gallons in a bushel". Then the answer would be: a peck of peaches is smaller than a bushel of apples.
There are 16 dry pints in a peck. Fluid pints would be different, of course. "I love you a bushel and a peck, a bushel and a peck and a hug around the neck I love you a bushel and a peck, you bet your pretty neck I do! Doodle-doodle doodle *pause* doodle doodle doodle *pause* doodle doodle doodle doo"
six --OR-- If you are talking about a strictly volumetric conversion, there are 32 quarts in a bushel. This would be the case if you had one bushel of dried, shelled field corn, for example.
There are approximately 8.70 gallons in a bushel, so you would need about 4.35 two-gallon buckets to hold a bushel of beans.
alot of farms and many different kinds of animals
A dry, or "corn" gallon, is 1/8 of a bushel, so 8 dry gallons would be a bushel.
A bushel is a unit of volume equivalent to 4 pecks or 32 quarts. Therefore, a bushel of green boiled peanuts would be equal to 32 quarts.
There are three different kinds of pain and possibly a fourth that would be a combination of the others. The types are somatic, neuropathic, and visceral.