Depends: what's your water source? How fast is it flowing? How large of an opening do the bottles have? How many can you fill simultaneously? If we're talking a hundred bottles simultaneously at Niagara falls, I'd say all 100 could be filled in 2 minutes; if we're talking standard soda bottles at a tap in the kitchen, depends on how fast you move & how strong you turn on your sink.
A 1-liter jug contains 1000 milliliters. To find out how many 10 mL bottles can be filled from it, divide 1000 mL by 10 mL, which equals 100. Therefore, you can fill 100 ten-milliliter bottles from a 1-liter jug.
600 litres / (1 litre/bottle) = 600 bottles
There are 9 liter bottles in a 9 liter case.
To determine how many 500 ml bottles can be filled from two liters, we first convert two liters to milliliters. Since one liter is equal to 1000 milliliters, two liters would be 2000 milliliters. Then, we divide 2000 ml by 500 ml to find the number of bottles that can be filled. Therefore, four 500 ml bottles can be filled from two liters.
About 15.1 3-liter bottles.
There are approximately 1.056 16.9 oz bottles of water in a liter.
There are approximately 3.78 8 oz bottles in a liter.
Depends on the size/capacity of the bottles.
a quarter liter is 250 ml.. 5 liter is 5000 ml so 5000 / 250 = 20 bottles
Eight 1-liter bottles equates to about 2.1 gallons.
6000 Seconds or 100 minutes or 1 hour and 40 minutes
Oh, what a lovely question! If we have 3 liters of lemonade, that's the same as 3000 ml. If each bottle is 250 ml, we can fill 12 bottles with that refreshing lemonade. Just imagine all the joy and happiness those bottles will bring to others!