8 fluid ounces = 1/2 pint
There are 10 pints in 80 fluid ounces, so you would need 10 pints of juice to fill the punch bowl.
Only one, but you have to fill it and dump it almost 6 times.
750ml would typically fill a standard wine bottle or a 25.4 fluid ounce (oz) bottle. It is roughly equivalent to about 3 1/4 cups or 3/4 of a standard 1-liter bottle.
40 gallons is 320 pints.
An ounce is weight and a pint is volume. Neither one can be converted to the other without more informationExample: An ounce of Uranium would be much smaller than a pint because it is so heavy. But an ounce of hydrogen would likely fill many pints.If you are talking about water, there are 16 ounces in a pint, so the answer is, "No" in this case.Another Perspective:A pint is larger than one fluid ounce. One fluid ounce is 0.0625 pints.
There are 10 pints in 80 fluid ounces, so you would need 10 pints of juice to fill the punch bowl.
Only one, but you have to fill it and dump it almost 6 times.
A 16.9-ounce plastic bottle can typically hold around 50-60 dimes, depending on how they are packed. If you fill it with dimes, at 10 cents each, you would have approximately $5.00 to $6.00. The exact amount can vary based on how tightly the dimes are packed into the bottle.
750ml would typically fill a standard wine bottle or a 25.4 fluid ounce (oz) bottle. It is roughly equivalent to about 3 1/4 cups or 3/4 of a standard 1-liter bottle.
You measure it with a very small scale. I have one, mine is called a 'postal scale'
There are 8 pints in 1 gallon, so a 6-gallon bucket would require 48 pints of water to fill.
6 and 2/5 glasses
40 gallons is 320 pints.
The traditional long stemmed champagne flute holds 6 ounces to the rim. The normal serving would be 3 ounces as they are never filled completely to the top for toasts. To figure the answer we take 25.4 and divide that by 3: 25.4 ÷ 3 = 8.47 glasses. Since we cannot fill a glass with .47 of an ounce the answer is 8 glasses would be the yield for that volume of champagne bottle.
4
To determine how many nickels will fit in a 2-ounce bottle, we first need to know the volume of a nickel. A nickel has a diameter of 0.835 inches and a thickness of 0.077 inches, giving it a volume of approximately 0.36 cubic centimeters (cm³). Since there are about 29.57 cm³ in an ounce, a 2-ounce bottle holds about 59.15 cm³. Dividing the bottle's volume by the volume of a nickel suggests that roughly 164 nickels could fit in the bottle, depending on how tightly they are packed.
Four cups.