You can drink the water.
Same as drinkin water from a glass/cup. JM
3/4 of a cup of Fruity Pebbles has 26g of carbs.
Yes, there is a difference. A dry cup of flour is measured by spooning the flour into the cup and leveling it off. A liquid cup of water is measured by pouring the water into the measuring cup and checking it at eye level for accuracy. The two measurements are different due to the differing densities of flour and water.
No. Boiling point is an intensive physical property, which means it does not matter how large the sample is.
There is no such English phrase as "tea of a cup." You either have a cup of tea, or you have tea in a cup.
They are the same thing.
When you are estimating, you're making an educated "guess". For example, if there's water in a cup, you see that the water is clearly between 300 mL and 310 mL, so an estimation would be anything in between those two values. When you are guessing, you have no foundation to base it on. For example, lets take the water in the cup again. W/o looking at the measurements at all, with no knowledge you make the statement: The cup has about 1000mL of water.
A D Cup is larger.morr full has moor cleveg
The water vapor in the air. Since the cup is so cold from the ice inside, the vapor in the air when it hits the cup it causes it to make the water on the outsaide of the cup. You'd think it came from the inside, but it doesn't.
A B cup bra is designed for breasts with a 2-inch difference between the bust and underbust measurements, while a C cup bra is designed for a 3-inch difference. This means that a C cup offers more room in the cups for larger breasts compared to a B cup.
1 cup is equal to 237 grams. If you do not want the rounded off conversion, the full conversion is equal to 236.58824 grams.
A cup of sand, sand sinks in water, thus its heavier.