Well, you figure that there is, roughly, 326 million trillion gallons on the Earth. There are 16 cups in one gallon. So... 16*326 million trillion = 5792 million trillion or 5.792 billion trillion cups. Or 5,792,000,000,000,000,000,000 in number form.
There are approximately 29,573.5 drops in one pound of water.
A measuring cup is 16 tablespoons or 48 teaspoons or 3648 drops. 1 tablespoon is 3 teaspoons. 1 teaspoon is 76 drops.
There are approximately 591 drops of water in one fluid ounce.
There are 8 oz. in one cup, so 1/3 of 8 = 2.66 oz.
5.28 tbsp 1 cup = 16 tbsp 1 tbsp = 0.06 cup
There are approximately 29,573.5 drops in one pound of water.
One US quart is 18,927 drops.
A measuring cup is 16 tablespoons or 48 teaspoons or 3648 drops. 1 tablespoon is 3 teaspoons. 1 teaspoon is 76 drops.
250 grams water in one cup.
A cup is 250gm. -So a cup of water is 250ml.
One fifth of one cup.
250 grams water in one cup.
There are approximately 591 drops of water in one fluid ounce.
For water only, grams equals milliliters. One cup = 250mL. So, one cup = 250g
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.
One cup of water equals 237 ml. Also, one cup of water is equal to 8 fluid ounces, and equal to 237 grams.
"Drops" come in many different sizes (the biggest raindrops have as much water as a thousand of the smallest raindrops and the smallest raindrops are a million times as massive as the typical cloud or fog droplet). However, some old cookbooks reckon that there are 72 drops to a teaspoon and there are roughly 200 teaspoons to the liter, so 14,400 drops per liter is a pretty close answer. You could call it 15,000 and not be far wrong.