Minus the glass, cup, or container, 16 oz of water weighs exactly 16 ounces.
Technically, it depends on the temperature of the water. The density of water changes as heat is added or removed.
Those two units of measure do not convert. One is weight or mass and the other is volume.
Assuming the 16 fl oz is water, it weighs 16 ounces. Other liquids may be heavier or lighter than water.
This is not true. A fluid ounce of water is not equal to one dry ounce.
It depends on the density of the liquid.
Approximately 0.78 of a pound
It weighs 473.168 grams
1 pound
One pound
A 1L pitcher of water will weigh exactly 1kg.
There is 8 ounces of water.
Well that depends on what you made the bottle out of and how much of that material you used. But the water inside would weigh approximately 473 grams (roughly 1 pound) depending on certain environmental conditions
No. In cooking we use dry measure and liquid measure and they are not interchangeable. If you wanted equal amounts of water and dirt you would have to weigh them for them to be the same because water is more dense it weighs more than dirt.
16 fl oz is 473.176mL
16 oz of sand weighs one pound.
A 1L pitcher of water will weigh exactly 1kg.
well, it depends what you mean. 16 oz, is a lb., but it depends on what measurement youre looking for.
16.69 oz or 1.04 lb.
In general a fluid ounce of water will be an ounce of weight. A pint of water is 16 ounces which would be one pound.
It weighs 29.57 grams.
There is 8 ounces of water.
one pound or 16 oz
two 32/16 = 2
16 oz to the bottom rim. 17 oz to the top
Well that depends on what you made the bottle out of and how much of that material you used. But the water inside would weigh approximately 473 grams (roughly 1 pound) depending on certain environmental conditions
Due to the varying levels of water concentration in your fruit, it's nearly impossible to tell how much it would weigh, exactly. A pint of 3-5cm cherry tomatos can weigh between 10 oz for a lower density, and 16 oz for a higher density. -t0matoK1ng