The basic metric unit of measure for measuring the capacity of a pitcher is liters (L).
Dry measure tends to be SLIGHTLY more than liquid measure, which in most recipes won't change things. But, if the recipe has to be increased to feed more people, then what started out as 1/8th cup can end up being 1/4 or 1/2, depending on the amounts used. You can prove this to yourself by filling both a liquid measuring cup (use a 2 cup measure) with exactly 1 cup of water. Then fill to the brim 1 cup dry measure and carefully pour the dry measure cup into the 2 cup measuring cup, get eye level and you will see the difference.
You cannot. Millilitres are a measure of volume, milligrams are a measure of mass and unless you know the density of the substance that you are measuring out, the conversion is not valid.
There are many instruments to measure lengths. But selection of measuring device depends on the maximum length it can measure. For example a small ruler used in schools can measure maximum 15 centimeters (or 6 inches). Here is a list of some measuring devices for measuring length: 1. Ruler (also known as scale) max 30cm 2. Meter Rod (that used by tailors or cloth sellers), max 100 cm 3. Measuring Tape (used by surveying engineers) For measuring very large distances travelled, In vehicles, speedometers also have distance measuring display. Ships use knots for measuring nautical miles.
That would be a ruler, yardstick, or meterstick, depending on the system of measure you are using.
repeatability
repeatability
Exactly what measuring device? There are hundreds of "measuring devices" to measure different things.
-- If you have a metric measuring tape, there's a mark at 2.0 meters.-- If you have an "English" measuring tape, measure off 6feet6-3/4inches ; you'll be almost exactly right on.
Uh, in liters? I'm not exactly sure what this question is asking...do you mean the units? or exactly how to measure it? Because if you want to measure water, I'd say use a measuring cup...
depends how big it is
Nina can measure 32 oz of water by using her 16 oz bottle twice, and then measuring out 7 oz from the 32 oz with her cup measure.
The measuring device was not invented by a single person. Throughout history, various individuals contributed to the development of different measuring instruments such as rulers, tape measures, and thermometers. These inventions have evolved over time to become the measuring devices we use today.
When measuring an angle you have to measure the sides using a protractor.
use a measuring measure,like the one for clothes measuring
You can measure its volume with a measuring cup or measuring spoons. You can measure its weight with a food scale. You can measure its temperature with a thermometer.
A piece of string and a ruler or tape measure.