Depends upon the specific wording of the statute in your jurisdiction but probably, yes. Was it done intentionally? ANY unwanted 'touching' is technically an assault.
One way to find the capacity of a teapot is to completely fill the teapot with water. Then, find the largest measuring cup you have. If the largest you have is a one cup measurer, then start filling up that cup and pooring out the water from the teapot into the cup. Once the cup is full, empty the water down the drain and keep a running tally of how many cups you are filling. Once you get to the end you will eventually have water that will not fill the cup completely. At this point you must use another measuring device, like a tablespoon and measure how many of those are remaining. You may have to estimate the last few drops of water.
Yes, throwing a cup of water on someone in Louisiana could be considered simple battery if it causes physical harm or constitutes offensive contact. Simple battery involves the intentional use of force or violence upon another person without their consent.
You drink it or you empty it onto someone else
Bloom and Politan Open Court - 2006 Disney Tea Cup Assault Trial was released on: USA: 30 June 2008
True
If a cup of water is dropped, the water will tend to stay inside the cup momentarily due to inertia. However, once the cup hits the ground and stops moving, the water will then spill out of the cup due to the lack of support from the container.
Yes
the answer is true not false
There's no reason it should, since the water and the cup fall with the same acceleration.
Water is an amorphous liquid; it takes the form of any structure that contains it. Pouring water into a cup would result in a cup filled with "cup-shaped" water.
Water cannot be absorbed into a cup.
It depends because if you put a whole cup of water, then it depends how tall the cup is!