Fill 4 ltr jar State of two jars: (4, 0)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr: (0, 4)Refill 4 ltr: (4, 4)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar until it is full: (1, 7)Empty 7 ltr: (1, 0)Pour from 4 lts to 7 ltr: (0, 1)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 1)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar: (0, 5)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 5)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar until it is full: (2, 7)Empty 7 ltr: (2, 0)Pour from 4 lts to 7 ltr: (0, 2)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 2)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar: (0, 6)Done.
Fill 7 Ltr jug from well 7 Ltr jug ->(pour into) 5 ltr jug Unplug the 5 ltr jug 7 ltr jug -> 5 ltr jug fill 7 ltr jug from the well. 7 ltr jug -> 5 ltr jug unplug the 5 ltr jug (You will have 4 lrs in the 7 ltr jug and nothing in the 5 ltr jug) 7 ltr jug -> 5 ltr jug fill the 7 ltr jug from the well 7 ltr jug -> 5 ltr jug You will have 6 ltrs of water in the 7 ltr jug which you can put on the lever to open the gate Shailesh Singh Pakuranga, Auckland
Usually abbreviations stand for many different things. In this case it is most likely that LTR stands for "Long term relationship" which is used to indicate the "marital status" of a relation on social media sites.
A gear box for a 1989 2.6-ltr petrol Mitsubishi Pajero cannot fit on a 2.3-ltr diesel motor.
This question makes absolutely no sense !
No, there are 1000ml in 1 ltr. Therefore 750ml is 3/4 of a litre.
if 10 to 1 is 1 ltr of oil for every 10 ltr of fuel then math is easy 5 ltr of fuel would get .5 ltr or one half liter of oil.
1/2 liter equals 500 mL (1,000 mL in each liter).
yeah there is no harm in that
0.5
The ltr 450 with stock gearing is 87 mph, much faster than other atv's.
1 ltr = 1000 mlso, 147 ltr = 147 x 1000 = 147000 ml