If poured evenly (and exact) there would be 1/4 litre (250 mL) in each cup, or 8.45 fluid ounces in each glass.
12
It's 9.2 cups assuming that each cup is 250 mL [metric system] or 77 ounces. So basically theres 9.625 glasses in 2.3 litres.
Depends on the size of the glass. A liter of water is about 33.8 ounces. A "regular" glass might be about 8 ounces. That's 4 glasses and a little dribble extra in each one. For 4 liters, that's about 16 glasses each containing 8 ounces and a little dribble more.
There are approximately 67.6 ounces in 2 liters. Therefore, 20 liters is equivalent to about 676 ounces. If each glass can hold 8 ounces, then 676 ounces can fill about 84.5 glasses. Since you cannot have half glasses, you could fill about 84 glasses with 20 liters of liquid.
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2.5 litres ÷ 1/4 litres = 2.5 ÷ 0.25 = 10
The answer will depend on how big each glass is and they can very greatly in size.
An adult needs about 8 glasses of water each day to stay healthy.
When the two glasses of water are poured into a pitcher, the temperature of the combined water will remain the same as the initial temperature of the water in each glass. The thermal energy of the water will increase due to the sum of the thermal energies of the water in both glasses as they mix together.
100cc is equal to 0.1 liters, so you would need approximately 10 glasses of water that are 100cc each to equal 1 liter.
To find out how much lemonade is left in the bottle after Rachel fills W glasses with W milliliters each, we first calculate the total amount of lemonade used. This is W glasses × W milliliters/glass = W² milliliters. Since 2.5 liters is equal to 2500 milliliters, the amount of lemonade left in the bottle is 2500 - W² milliliters.
2.5 litres ÷ 250 litres = 0.01 (Those are some extremely large glasses: 250 litres ≈ 55 gallons each!)