Fill the 5-quart pail, then pour the liquid into the 3-quart pail until it is full.This will leave 2 quarts in your 5-quart pail. Empty the 3-quart pail.Pour the 2 quarts from your 5-quart pail into the 3-quart pail. Then fill up the 5-quart pail.Between the full 5-quart pail and the 3-quart pail (with 2 quarts in it) you should now have 7 quarts!
That would be a heterogeneous mixture.
When I was growing up on my Grandfather's farm we had many pails and buckets laying around. Pails were containers with larger bases than top openings (an upside down bucket) for carrying water and milk. Buckets were used to carry everything else. I don't think anyone makes pails anymore, since carrying water and milk are no longer a big part of farm life. No one confused a pail and a bucket where I grew up.In regards to units of measure, a pail or bucket is not a unit of measure--pail or buckets can be had in one, two, three....gallons, liters, etc. The only difference is which end the bottom is on --the small end (bucket) or the large end (pail). Now it's settled.Jack
You first dump the 5-gallon pail, then fill the 5-gallon pail from the water from the 8-gallon pail. Then you dump the 5-gallon pail again, and you are left with 2 gallons in the 8-gallon pail.
"An ice cream pail" is not a standard unit of measurement.
Pail. When you milk a cow you use a pail for the milk to go into.
Milk Pail Restaurant was created in 1929.
Me.
The fable "The Frog in the Milk Pail" is attributed to Aesop, who was an ancient Greek fabulist and storyteller known for his collection of fables. This particular fable tells the story of a frog who falls into a milk pail and uses its determination to churn the milk into butter to save itself.
Haryana for sure - Rajnish Kumar
No, a pail of garbage is not an element. In chemistry, an element is a substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substances by chemical means. A pail of garbage is a physical mixture of various compounds and elements.
pail a pail
Pail - like a water pail
Pail
Milk is used as a food item. Unlike other items in buckets milk can be drunk from the pail. Milk does not replenish health or hunger but it will remove status effects like poison. Milk can also be used as a crafting ingredient in cake along with eggs, wheat and sugar.
Fill the 4 qt pail, and empty the contents into the 9 qt pail. Repeat. You should now have eight quarts in the 9 qt pail, and none in the 4 qt pail. Fill the 4 qt pail again, and fill the remaining space of the 9 qt pail with it, leaving a full 9 qt pail and a 4 qt pail with only three quarts in it. Empty the 9 qt pail, and dump the contents of the 4 qt pail into the 9 qt pail. There are now three quarts in the 9 qt pail. Fill the 4 qt pail and empty the contents into the 9 qt pail. Repeat this step without spilling anything. The second time, two quarts should go into the 9 qt pail, filling it up, and two should remain in the 4 qt pail. Empty the contents of the 9 qt pail, and transfer that of the 4 qt pail into the 9 qt pail. Fill the 4 qt pail and empty it into the 9 qt pail. There are now 6 quarts in the 9 qt pail. QED.
The bright blue pail has the pellet with the poison.