Not unless you drank a lot more than any sane person would care to try.
A beer -- say a Bud -- is about 5% alcohol by volume. Therefore you would have to drink five 1% beers to get the same amount of alcohol. What's more, since you wouldn't be getting it all at one time, you'd probably have to drink even more than that since the body begins to metabolize alcohol almost immediately and it would take longer to build your blood alcohol level up to a "buzz." HOWEVER, depending on what you were drinking, you might get some sort of effect from other ingredients. It's not a good idea to mess around with you body chemistry unless you know exactly what you're doing. Even then, it's problematic.
2/3 of 70% and 1/3 of 10%
One percent by weight. Alcohol has a density of less than water, so 1 g of alcohol is more than 1 mL.
Percent alcohol is relative, so it is 5% of the pint volume, but in 1 pint you have double the alcohol wight comparing to 1/2 a pint.
The volume in litres, multiplied by the percentage that is alcohol.
0.4oz
684 ml
5% of 355 ml = 5/100 × 355 ml = 17.75 ml of alcohol (= 1.775 units of alcohol, 1 unit = 10 ml)
To make 90 percent alcohol, you typically start with a higher concentration of ethanol, such as 95 percent (which can be obtained from distillation). You then dilute it with distilled water to achieve the desired concentration. Specifically, to create 90 percent alcohol, mix 9 parts of the 95 percent ethanol with 1 part water. Always ensure to measure accurately and follow safety guidelines when handling alcohol.
Buzz Hunters - 2009 Buzz Hunters 1-1 was released on: USA: 14 February 2009
Salt
if 20 oz is 5% alcohol by volume, then 1 oz of a 20 oz beer is alcohol (20*.05).
28.8 minutes.In order to arrive at this answer, you must multiply 60 x 48, then get 1 percent of that product (2880).