A liquid dropper is a tool used to transfer small amounts of liquid, typically in a controlled and precise manner. It consists of a thin tube with a squeezable bulb at one end and a narrow opening at the other end to draw in and dispense liquids. Liquid droppers are commonly used in laboratories, pharmacies, and for administering medications or supplements.
Rain is drops of water.
There are approximately 1200 drops in 60 milliliters of liquid.
10 drops of water liquid is roughly equivalent to 0.5 milliliters. Drops can vary in size, but this is a common estimate when using a standard dropper.
liquid
When liquid water falls from the sky, it is called rain.
0.24 fluid ounces equates to 142 drops.
It depends on the size of the drops which, in turn, depends on the surface tension of the liquid.
"Drop" is not a standardized measurement, and will vary from dropper to dropper (and potentially from liquid to liquid). Your best bet is to take your dropper, put an ounce of liquid in it, and calibrate it by counting the drops.
In the most basic sense they're liquid drops with varying content of HCG. The biggest distinction is that sometimes they're prepared at homeopathic levels.
That depends on what substance you're dropping. Drops of oil weigh less than drops of water, so it takes more of them to make a pound. Drops of mercury or melted lead are heavier than drops of water, so it takes fewer of them to make a pound.
It depends because water and liquid has tiny tiny drops that can be 50 degrees or drops that can be 90 degrees. You only feel the average of the water or liquid. Room temperature is colder and hotter depending on the average liquids and tiny tiny drops