It means that the water or liquid is safe to drink.
Many areas have no access to fresh water but have plenty of salt water available. The desalination plants remove the salt, making water suitable for drinking and irrigation of crops.
The process of turning seawater into pure water is called desalination. Desalination removes salts and minerals, producing fresh water that is suitable for drinking or agricultural use.
The answer depends on what kinds of glasses: spectacles or ones for drinking from. Second, the answer depends on which aspect you wish to measure: mass, volume, height, refractive index, and so on.
No, blood cannot be purified into potable water. Blood contains various components such as cells, proteins, and waste products that are not suitable for drinking. It would require advanced filtration and purification processes to make blood safe for consumption, which is not practical.
Roughly 1% of the world's water is freshwater that is easily accessible for human use. The majority of this freshwater is locked in ice caps and glaciers, leaving only a small percentage available for drinking, agriculture, and industry.
Potable, according to dictionary.com, means "fit or suitable for drinking."
A beverage is a liquid, suitable for drinking. So basically beverage is a fancy way of saying your drink.
Desalination is the process of removing salt and other minerals from seawater to make it suitable for drinking or irrigation.
'Potable' is usually used as such, referring mainly to water.
The drinking water safe hose splitter is suitable for use in your garden.
'potable'
The quality of being suitable for drinking.
Potable water
Forfeit, Loss, Penalty. If you mean a gift giving freely. If you are drinking to the health of someone it would be food.
The purpose of the "not for drinking water" sign is to warn people that the water from that source is not safe or suitable for consumption.
I presume you mean water supplied to industry for industrial purposes, which would not have been purified to the extent where it is suitable for drinking from household taps (faucets).
No, drinking blood does not effectively hydrate the body. Blood is not a suitable replacement for water, which is the best way to stay hydrated.