About 5, 5oz. servings
There are 29.5735 mLs per 1 U.S. fluid ounce, therefore 5 fluid ounces equals 147.8675 mLs.
100 ml 1 liter = 1000 ml 1 ml = 0.001 L
Of course, depending on the dimensions of the bottle: a bottle with a volume of 5-100 mL is considered small.
A standard bottle of vodka contains 750 ml of liquid.
There is no such thing as a milliliter bottle of wine. One milliliter is only 0.03381 fluid ounces. A 750 milliliter bottle of Beringer White Zinfandel is equal to 25.36 ounces. This would give a person three 8-ounce servings with a little left over.
There are five servings in a standard 750 ml bottle of wine.
There are five servings in a 750 ml bottle of champagne.
There are five servings (glasses) of wine in a 750 ml bottle of wine.
2000 ml
A normal serving is one 8-ounce glass, which is 240 ml. There are around eight of these servings in a 2-liter bottle.
There are five standard servings of wine in a bottle (750 ml) of wine.
There are 29.5735 mLs per 1 U.S. fluid ounce, therefore 5 fluid ounces equals 147.8675 mLs.
To find out how many 150 mL servings are in 9 liters of juice, first convert 9 liters to milliliters: 9 L = 9,000 mL. Then, divide 9,000 mL by 150 mL per serving: 9,000 mL ÷ 150 mL/serving = 60 servings. Therefore, there are 60 servings of 150 mL in 9 liters of juice.
From a regular 750mL bottle of wine. You are looking at 5 1/2 servings per bottle
4 to 6 standard champagne glasses per 750 ml bottle. The bottle is technically 25.3 ounces which would indicate that 6 glasses should be expected, but I find if you really fully fill the champagne glass you only get about 4 servings per bottle.
100 ml 1 liter = 1000 ml 1 ml = 0.001 L
Generally, on bottles, a single serving suggestion is given as 0.25 litres. Therefore, a 1.75 litre bottle will contain 1.75/0.25 = 7 servings.