The mass of the container would be measured in kilograms, because the container will be quite large you would use a prefix to indicate the multiple of kilograms. 1000 kg would be a megagram (Mg), or more commonly a tonne.
1 cup of sugar is approximately 200 grams in the metric system.
You can use displacement of water but you'll have to do it quickly before the sugar dissolves. You can also find a substance that sugar does not dissolve in and use that instead of water. If you change its state of matter, the volume might change.
Typically, sugar is stored in containers like canisters, jars, or bags. It's important to keep sugar in an airtight container to prevent clumping and maintain its freshness. Sugar can also be stored in specialized sugar containers with flip-top lids for easy pouring.
No, a 1.5-quart container will not hold 5 pounds of sugar. A quart is approximately 1.1 liters, and 1.5 quarts is about 1.4 liters total. Since granulated sugar weighs approximately 0.9 pounds per quart, a 1.5-quart container can hold about 1.35 pounds of sugar, which is significantly less than 5 pounds.
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Well, honey, a 20-foot container can hold around 25 metric tons of sugar. Just make sure you don't have a sweet tooth, or you might end up eating your profits!
20 grams is a metric measure.
56,000 kilos or 56 tonnes or 61.7 US tons or 55.11 imperial tons
The main export is sugar.
A standard 40-foot container can typically hold about 25 to 28 metric tons of cargo. Given that each 50 kg bag of sugar weighs 0.05 metric tons, you can fit approximately 500 to 560 bags in a 40-foot container, depending on the packing method and any additional space required for safety or accessibility.
A pound is a weight measure, not a volume measure. So you would just pour the powdered sugar into a container on a scale to come up to one pound (allowing for the container), or just buy/obtain a one-pound box.
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1 cup of sugar is approximately 200 grams in the metric system.
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