Forty 750 ml bottles of wine would serve 100 people two standard five ounce glasses of wine each.
A regular 750 ml bottle usually gives you 4 glasses of wine. So, if you get 6 or 7 bottles, you will get each of the 25 people a glass. Multiply that by the number of glasses each would like, and you'll get what you need. A good estimate is 2 people per 750 ml bottle 25 people would need 13 bottles, but I would get 15 to be safe.
This struck me as funny. The quick answer: 2 The longer explanation: 750ml is 750 milli-liters. 1,000ml = 1 liter. So since 750ml plus 750ml would equal 1,500ml , that would also be 1.5 liters. Hope that helps.
7 would leave 250ml extra 5 / 0.75 = 6.667 so not enough
A little more than 2.
There are 1892.7 ml in a half gallon. 1892.7 divided by 750 equals 2.5 (750ml bottles).They call a 1.75l a handle or half gallon because it is close but not an exact half gallon. There would be 2 1/3 bottles of 750ml vodka in a half gallon of vodka (1.75l).Read more: How_many_750_ml_of_vodka_are_there_in_a_half_gallon
To find 5% of 750ml, you would multiply 750ml by 0.05 (which is the decimal equivalent of 5%). 750ml x 0.05 = 37.5ml. Therefore, 5% of 750ml is 37.5ml.
Each 750ml bottle has about four glasses of wine. 20 bottles would give one glass to each person- so a reasonable host should probably get 40 bottles so each guest enjoys the gathering without getting intoxicated.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions now? Alright, let me break it down for you. So, 1 liter is about 1.33 standard wine bottles, which means 5 liters would be around 6.65 wine bottles. But since we can't have a fraction of a bottle, let's just round it up to 7 bottles. So, 5 liters is roughly equal to 7 standard 750ml wine bottles.
you would need to think how much people would drink, but if you used disposable cups, and 1 person had 1 cup full each, then look at this: 2litre bottle-10 people.
The average bottle of champagne produces 6 servings, when served in fluted glasses. That is a full flute. If your guests are not big champagne drinkers, you can get by with serving half a flute: have the servers pour as the give the glass to the guest. The bubbles foam to the top of the glass, but when they subside, there is really just half a glass of champagne. So, 25 bottles of champagne serve 150 full glasses and 13 bottles serve 150 half glasses.
The weight of 750ml of liquid will depend on the density of the liquid. For water, which has a density of approximately 1 gram per milliliter, 750ml would weigh around 750 grams (or 0.75 kilograms).