Milligrams measures mass, not volume.
If you're looking for milliliters, it's roughly 591.471.
Only one, but you have to fill it and dump it almost 6 times.
Yes. If you look at the Nutrition Facts on the back of the bottle, you will see Sodium as part of it. When any type of food has Sodium in the Nutrition Facts, it is referring to salt.For example, the bottle of Sprite I am drinking has 110mg of Sodium in the entire bottle, that is, it has 110mg, or milligrams, of salt in the entire bottle of soda.
-- A quart of milk is about 94.6% of 1 liter. -- A "16.9-ounce" bottle of water is 1/2 liter. -- A 2-liter bottle of soda is 2 liters.
One if you fill it 100 times or 100 individual full graduated cylinders.
In 1990, the cost of a bottle of soda would have varied depending on factors such as location and brand. On average, a bottle of soda may have cost around $1 at that time.
The volume of water in a bottle of soda varies depending on the size and type of soda. A standard 12-ounce (355 mL) soda typically contains about 90-95% water, which means it has approximately 10.8 to 11.4 ounces (320-340 mL) of water. However, this volume can change based on the specific formulation and added ingredients in different soda brands.
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If one soda bottle contains 1.5 liters, then the volume of six bottles can be calculated by multiplying the volume of one bottle by six. Thus, 1.5 liters × 6 = 9 liters. Therefore, the total volume of six soda bottles is 9 liters.
1 liter
4
44 fluid ounces is 1.3 liters.
To determine the volume of the filled soda bottle, you could use the water displacement method. Fill a container with a known volume of water, then submerge the soda bottle filled with liquid in the container. Measure the volume of water that is displaced by the soda bottle, which will give you the volume of the liquid inside the bottle.
591.47 ml 1 ounce = 29.57 ml 1 ml = 0.03 ounce
Approximately 7.5ml will fit inside of a lid from a soda. This is the lid that keeps the bottle of soda closed. It would only take about 4 lids to make an ounce.
This experiment may be very dangerous.
NONE -you cannot compare a LENGTH to a VOLUME
Only one, but you have to fill it and dump it almost 6 times.